Sabey Data Centers has announced a strategic partnership with OptiCool Technologies to simplify and accelerate deployments of two-phase refrigerant pumped liquid-cooling systems in Sabey’s multi-tenant data centers. Sabey says the goal is to support high-density and AI-driven workloads by expanding its integrated cooling technologies partnership program across its national portfolio.
Sabey frames the partnership as part of a broader effort to remove barriers to liquid-cooling adoption as compute density rises. The company says adding OptiCool expands Sabey’s ecosystem of integrated cooling technologies and gives customers a scalable path to higher-density operations.
OptiCool’s two-phase refrigerant pumped systems are positioned for rack-level heat removal using a non-conductive refrigerant that absorbs heat through phase change. According to the announcement, this approach avoids the need for chilled water, large mechanical systems, or significant data hall retrofits, with the stated intent of increasing compute density while lowering power usage and simplifying facility design.
“Demand for high-density compute continues to accelerate, and cooling has become one of the most critical challenges our customers face,” said John Sasser, CTO of Sabey Data Centers. “Partnering with OptiCool allows us to offer a differentiated cooling pathway that is both efficient and flexible. Together, we’re making it easier for customers to deploy advanced liquid cooling solutions while maintaining the operational clarity and reliability they expect from Sabey.”
“By working with Sabey, we’re able to bring our two-phase refrigerant cooling systems into facilities designed specifically to support the next generation of compute,” said Lawrence “LL” Lee, Chief Channel Officer at OptiCool. “This partnership helps customers move forward with confidence as they transition to more advanced cooling architectures.”
Sabey says OptiCool will participate in “future-ready deployments” through Sabey’s integrated technologies partner program, aligning cooling technology, facility design, and operational responsibility.
Source: Sabey Data Centers






