Vertiv has collaborated with NVIDIA to accelerate the next generation of artificial intelligence (AI) factories, detailing its design maturity for 800 VDC power architectures. Building on its strategic alignment announced in May 2025, Vertiv has significantly advanced its platform designs to accelerate its ‘unit of compute’ strategy, moving from concept to engineering readiness. The 800 VDC power portfolio is planned to release in the second half of 2026, aligning to support the 2027 rollout of NVIDIA Rubin Ultra platforms.
The data centre industry is at a critical inflection point: Traditional 54 VDC in-rack distribution, designed for kilowatt-scale racks, cannot meet the megawatt-scale demands of accelerated computing. To address this, Vertiv and NVIDIA are collaborating on scalable Vertiv 800 VDC systems integrated with energy storage, creating the foundation for AI factories optimised for large-scale, synchronous AI and high-performance computing workloads. Vertiv is finalising its component specifications for comprehensive platform designs which include centralised rectifiers, high-efficiency DC busways, and rack-level DC-DC converters engineered to support the megawatt scale rack demands of future NVIDIA compute.
This platform-level readiness extends to Vertiv’s global service model. Safely servicing complex 800 VDC environments is a critical enabler for AI factory adoption and a key differentiator for Vertiv. The company’s proven serviceability for AC and DC systems, backed by its 4,000+ field service engineers, provides the long-term operational confidence required for mission-critical AI deployments.
Commenting on the collaboration, Scott Armul, executive vice president, global portfolio and business units, Vertiv, said, “Larger AI workloads are reshaping every aspect of data centre design. Our systems-level expertise in both AC and DC-based power data centre architectures positions us uniquely to address the unprecedented power demands of AI workloads. With the development of our Vertiv 800 VDC platform designs, we are translating our extensive experience into next-generation solutions that will support the massive compute densities required for AI factories.”
“We are engineering a holistic, scalable system where infrastructure parts interoperate as one – demonstrating Vertiv’s role as a systems-level partner, moving from vision to readiness and enabling the infrastructure necessary to power future-ready AI factories,” Armul added.
Meanwhile, Dion Harris, senior director, HPC, Cloud and AI Infrastructure, NVIDIA, said, “Powering the next generation of megawatt-scale AI factories requires a fundamental shift in power architectures. NVIDIA and Vertiv are working closely together to develop the scalable and efficient power foundation needed to unlock the full potential of next-generation AI infrastructure.”