Foldable phones have a persistent heat problem. You’re cramming flagship-level hardware into thin, hinged designs with minimal space for heat dissipation. Apple might have found a solution for its rumored iPhone Ultra foldable.
According to Fixed Focus Digital, a reliable Apple supply chain leaker on Weibo, the iPhone Ultra will feature vapor chamber cooling that delivers “quite impressive” thermal performance. The tipster says Apple has “really gone all out” on thermal engineering for the device, which reportedly measures just 4.5mm thick when unfolded.
This marks the first time any source has connected vapor chamber cooling to Apple’s foldable iPhone project. The technology, which Apple introduced to iPhones with last year’s iPhone 17 Pro, uses deionized water sealed inside a laser-welded chamber. When the processor heats up, the water vaporizes and carries heat away from the chip. Apple claimed this design delivered 40% better sustained performance compared to the graphite cooling systems in earlier Pro models.
Getting vapor chamber cooling into a foldable presents serious engineering challenges. The iPhone Ultra’s rumored 4.5mm thickness when open would make it even thinner than this year’s iPhone Air, which reportedly skipped vapor chamber cooling entirely due to space constraints. Installing this cooling system in a device that’s both thinner and mechanically more complex seems counterintuitive.
The thermal management breakthrough matters for several reasons:
- Foldable phones typically throttle performance when they get hot
- The thin, dual-screen design offers limited heat dissipation options
- High-end processors in cramped spaces create thermal bottlenecks
- Better cooling could enable sustained flagship performance
Fixed Focus Digital also confirmed that Apple is sticking to its September launch timeline for the iPhone Ultra, despite manufacturing pressures around pre-assembly processes. Mark Gurman separately reported in April that the fall debut remains on track alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup, with mass production set to begin in July.
The iPhone Ultra is expected to start around $2,000 and feature a 7.8-inch inner display, 5.5-inch cover screen, A20 chip, and Touch ID instead of Face ID. Apple’s entry into the foldable market comes as Samsung continues to dominate the category, but persistent thermal issues have limited the appeal of foldable phones among power users.
If Apple can solve the heat problem that has plagued other foldable phones, it could give the iPhone Ultra a significant advantage in the premium foldable market. The vapor chamber cooling news represents the first major thermal development for the device as Apple prepares to challenge Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold dominance.
