From SemiAnalysis, May 26:
Four-Phase 800VDC Transition, Power Rack Economics, SST, Equipment Content/MW Build, Supplier Implications
We’d like to thank DG Matrix, Novos Power, and Aran Industries for their contributions and insights during the preparation of this deep dive.
Introduction: Welcome to the Power Chain Roller Coaster
Across
every major industry conference in the first half of 2026, our research
team kept walking past the same scene: a booth ten or fifteen people
deep, leaning in to catch every word from another datacenter equipment
messiah preaching the gospel of 800VDC. The pitch was the same every
time. 800VDC is about to change the electrical infrastructure of the
datacenter.
Every architectural shift looked excessive at first.
Operators spent decades keeping water and leaks out of the data hall,
then GPU thermal density made running coolant right up against the
precious silicon unavoidable. Each shift happened anyway, because
physics and the economics of compute do not negotiate. 800VDC is next,
and the logic is the same. Tokens per watt are what matters.
Source: Nvidia, InferenceX
As
GPU clusters become increasingly dense, with Kyber Ultra approaching
660kW per rack, the physics start to break down. Resistive losses scale
with current squared, and at these power levels copper mass and thermal
envelope exceed what fits inside a rack. Moving to 800VDC eliminates
conversion stages, reduces resistive losses, and cuts facility-level
power consumption by ~5%. At 1GW of IT load, that is over 50MW of
continuous savings, tens of millions in annual electricity costs, or new
compute capacity unlocked. For all the inference-king proponents out
there, 800VDC is a transition forced by physics and motivated by system
economics.
We have been tracking this transition through our InferenceX and Industrials Models,
which provide a bottom-up view of where efficiency gains materialize
and which equipment categories absorb the disruption. The Industrials Model
includes a dedicated 800VDC module, building up from individual
accelerator architectures to a top-down view of 800VDC penetration, MW
adoption, and market sizing for equipment like the power sidecar and
Solid-State Transformers (SSTs).
Source: SemiAnalysis Industrials Model
This
deep dive traces the transition phase by phase: from the sidecar
retrofit, through faciliy-level DC distribution, to the SST endgame. For
each phase, we analyze the BoM and map the changes in equipment
content/MW, what survives, what gets redesigned, and what gets
eliminated.
The 800VDC revolution is set to dramatically
change the revenue trajectory of certain suppliers. We’ve been tracking
winners and losers for over a year in Industrials
Model, which estimates the BoM for 20+ different datacenter designs
broken down into 70+ equipment types and lays out the impact for 500+
suppliers. It is built on our industry-leading Datacenter Model which forecasts quarter-by-quarter MWs for 6000+ datacenters and anticipates design changes.
This
has enabled us to successfully call out both winners, and companies
inaccurately pictured as losers by the market, before anyone else. If
you are wondering whether UPS systems have a place in upcoming 800VDC
distribution, what is the market opportunity for SSTs, or which
suppliers are leading this transition, stick with us.
Source: SemiAnalysis Industrials Model
Part
1 of this 800VDC Revolution series covers datacenter layout and
equipment implications. Part 2 will focus on power electronics and the
semiconductor revolution underneath it.
Understanding The Basics: What is 800VDC and Why It’s Inevitable
At
its simplest, 800VDC in this context means distributing power at ~800
volts direct current through the data hall or row and into the rack,
then stepping it down near the compute. The number 800 is not arbitrary,
but a voltage high enough to materially reduce current (and therefore
copper loss and thermal burden) while remaining within the broad
regulatory and product-safety classification of “low-voltage DC” in many
jurisdictions. For context, EU rules around the Low Voltage Directive
scope reference DC equipment ratings up to 1,500 V DC (and AC up to
1,000 V).
Current datacenter electrical architectures generally
rely on AC distribution at the facility level. Datacenters today use
three-phase AC at 415V or 480V, and the topology relies on conventional
UPS architectures before distributing 48-54V DC within the rack.
This
works at today’s rack power levels, but starts to fail as rack
densities in the next two years approach ~600 kW+, for several reasons:
Copper becomes unmanageable at 48–54 V.
A 1 MW rack at 48–54 VDC needs ~200 kg of copper busbars. At 1 GW
scale, that’s hundreds of tons of copper — brutal on cost, weight,
installation complexity, and routing space.
Source: Microsoft
Power shelves crowd out compute.
Today’s NVL72 racks already use up to 8 power shelves. At Kyber-class
rack power, a 48–54V approach would require ~64U-equivalent of power
hardware, effectiviely an entire rack, leaving no volume for compute.
Current becomes the real limiter.
Delivering 600 kW at 48–54 V implies ~12,500A. At 800 V, that drops to
~750 A (~16.7× less), enabling dramatically smaller conductors/busbars
and far lower thermal stress. If conductor resistance were held
constant, I²R losses fall ~278×, so in practice you shrink copper and
“buy” size/weight reductions.
Conversion losses compound and hurt reliability. Stacked
AC-to-DC and DC-to-DC stages reduce end-to-end efficiency, increase
heat, and introduce failure points, raising cooling loads, downtime
risk, and maintenance costs.
At the end of
the day, 800VDC is the physics enabler for 2,300W TDP chips and 600kW
racks, and those 600kW racks are the direct consequence of the push for
density, because density is what drives cost per token down. Cost per
token is dictated by the size of the scale-up world you can build at
full NVLink bandwidth: bigger domains mean wider Expert Parallelism (EP)
/ Tensor Parallelism (TP), MoE routing on NVLink rather than scale-out,
and less serialization across decode. As we laid out in our Vera Rubin Deep Dive and GTC 2026
pieces, Nvidia’s design rule is to pack compute tightly enough that
copper reaches everything in the rack. Reiner Pope made this point
cleanly on our friend Dwarkesh’s podcast a few weeks ago, indicating
that a single rack bounds the size of the expert layer you can build,
because the moment an all-to-all crosses a rack boundary, it falls onto a
scale-out fabric that is roughly eight times slower than NVLink.
Bigger scale-up worlds mean denser racks, denser racks mean 600kW envelopes, and 800VDC is what makes those envelopes possible.
Source: SemiAnalysis AI Networking Model
The Four Chapters of the HVDC Transition
The
move to 800VDC is a complex metamorphosis that rewrites the entire
electrical architecture, introduces new safety standards, requires new
regulatory frameworks, and, most importantly, forces operators to make
very different strategic choices about when to walk away from their
legacy AC distribution.
Source: SemiAnalysis
We
frame the 800VDC transition as progressing through four distinct
phases. Phases 1 and 2, starting in late 2026 / early 2027, retrofit the
existing AC distribution into 800VDC at the rack level via the power
rack. Phase 1 is the early-mover stage, driven by hyperscalers willing
to pay up for future-proofing and efficiency gains. Phase 2 kicks in
once 800VDC-native systems begin shipping at volume. Phase 3 rewrites
the electrical architecture itself, taking 800VDC distribution
facility-wide. Phase 4 is the end state, built around new pieces of
equipment that promise to render much of today’s electrical stack
obsolete....
....MUCH MORE
Previously:
March 27 - Opportunity: "Data Centers Are Transitioning From AC to DC 800-volt DC power delivery: will enable next-gen AI data centers"