Semiconductor Phone &
Laptop Coolers — Active TEC Cooling
Beyond standard fans. Our Thermo-Electric Coolers (TEC) act as miniature solid-state refrigerators, forcing heat transfer through the Peltier effect to keep core temperatures below ambient even under maximum load.
How Semiconductor Cooling Works →Delta-T Performance
-22°C
Below Ambient Measurement
Not sure which technology is right for you?
TEC is superior for high ambient temperatures, but fans are more energy-efficient. Compare the physics behind both solutions.
KryoZon Laptop Coolers are built for laptops that throttle — whether you're rendering 4K timelines, streaming 8-hour raid nights, or compiling large codebases on a Friday afternoon. Every unit in this collection uses active semiconductor (Peltier) cooling, not just fans, so surface temps drop 15–25°C below ambient instead of merely moving warm air around.
Pick the right model for your workload
- H1 Max — Flat semiconductor pad for 13″–16″ ultrabooks. The lightest pick for daily office + light gaming.
- H1 Pro — Ergonomic cooling stand designed for business travel and thin-and-light notebooks (13″–15″). Adjustable viewing angle, quiet fan profile.
- H4 Pro — Large-format stand with integrated accessory storage, engineered for 14″–17″ gaming laptops and mobile workstations. Higher load capacity and wider Peltier contact area than the H1 line.
- H7 — 8-fan hybrid pad with dual semiconductor modules for the heaviest sustained loads: AAA gaming, Blender renders, CUDA workloads.
Why semiconductor cooling beats plain fan pads
Traditional laptop cooling pads blow ambient air at a hot chassis — if your room is 28°C, your laptop bottom stays above 28°C. KryoZon's Peltier modules actively pull heat from the contact plate, letting the laptop's own heatpipes finally move heat out. In testing, that's the difference between a Ryzen 9 sustaining boost clocks and hitting thermal throttle after 10 minutes.
Who these are for
Gamers on desktop-replacement notebooks, video editors cutting ProRes and H.265, 3D and CAD users, developers running local LLMs, and streamers who need silent-enough cooling that the mic doesn't pick it up.
New to semiconductor cooling? Start with the Peltier effect explainer on our blog.