Data centers are evolving faster than ever. The rise of AI workloads, high-density computing, cloud infrastructure, and digital transformation is pushing facilities to deliver more power, manage more heat, and scale faster than traditional infrastructure was designed to support.
While much of the conversation focuses on processors, GPUs, and cooling technology, the materials used inside the infrastructure itself are becoming increasingly important.
Electrical insulation materials, connector housings, cooling system components, structural brackets, cable management hardware, and battery backup enclosures all play a critical role in reliability, efficiency, and long-term performance.
For engineers designing modern data center infrastructure, material selection is no longer a secondary consideration. It is becoming a strategic design decision.
AI is reshaping infrastructure requirements.
High-performance computing systems generate significantly higher thermal loads than traditional server environments. Rack densities continue to rise. Power distribution architectures are evolving. Cooling systems are becoming more complex.
This creates a new set of engineering challenges:
As facilities scale, these challenges become harder to solve with legacy materials alone.
Power delivery is one of the most critical systems inside a data center. Downtime is not an option, and even small inefficiencies can create significant operational costs at scale.
Modern data centers are increasingly moving toward higher-density power architectures that demand materials with stronger thermal and electrical performance.
Components in these systems often require:
Traditional materials may meet some of these requirements, but evolving infrastructure demands are pushing engineers to evaluate alternatives that offer improved performance and easier manufacturability.
This is especially true as higher-voltage architectures become more common in advanced computing environments.
Heat management has become one of the defining engineering challenges in modern data centers.
As AI workloads increase power density, cooling systems must manage larger thermal loads while maintaining reliability and operational efficiency.
This affects the materials used in:
Historically, metal has dominated many of these applications because of familiarity and durability. But cooling infrastructure introduces challenges that make material selection more nuanced.
Corrosion resistance becomes critical when fluids are involved. Condensation can impact efficiency. Weight affects installation and manufacturability. Complex metal assemblies may increase production cost and lead time.
This creates opportunities for engineered polymers designed for demanding electrical and fluid-handling environments.
Data centers combine high power density with mission-critical uptime requirements. That makes fire safety and electrical reliability non-negotiable.
Materials used in electrical systems and enclosures must often provide:
As sustainability and environmental compliance become more important, engineers are also evaluating alternatives to older material systems that may be heavier, harder to process, or less aligned with modern design requirements.
Metal remains essential in many data center systems, but it is no longer the default answer for every application.
In some structural and infrastructure components, advanced engineering plastics offer meaningful advantages.
Depending on the application, these may include:
Applications where this shift is becoming increasingly relevant include cable management systems, structural supports, cooling infrastructure, connector systems, and enclosure components.
The question is no longer whether plastics belong in data center infrastructure.
The real question is where they create the most value.
Energy resilience is another growing area of focus.
Backup power systems, battery storage infrastructure, and related electrical hardware require materials that can withstand demanding thermal and electrical environments while maintaining safety and long-term durability.
These applications place additional emphasis on:
As battery technologies evolve, so will the material requirements surrounding them.
The infrastructure supporting modern data centers is becoming more sophisticated, more demanding, and more specialized.
Power systems are evolving. Cooling strategies are changing. AI is accelerating thermal and electrical demands. Sustainability expectations are increasing.
That means material selection is no longer simply about choosing something that meets minimum performance requirements.
It is about selecting materials that support long-term reliability, manufacturability, efficiency, and scalability.
Engineers who make better material decisions today will be better positioned to build infrastructure ready for tomorrow’s workloads.
Modern data centers are under pressure from every direction: higher power density, rising heat loads, faster deployment expectations, and growing performance demands.
Behind every one of these challenges is a materials story.
From power distribution and cooling systems to cable management and backup power infrastructure, advanced materials are playing an increasingly important role in helping data centers operate safely and efficiently.
As infrastructure evolves, material innovation will continue to be one of the most important enablers of reliable digital growth.
Want to test Asahi Kasei materials in your data center application? Contact our technical experts today to request a sample or discuss how our formulations can meet your design requirements.