Abstract
A high compute density data center of today is characterized as one consisting of thousands of racks each with multiple computing units. The computing units include multiple microprocessors, each dissipating approximately 250 W of power. The heat dissipation from a rack containing such computing units exceeds 10 KW. Today's data center, with 1000 racks, over 30,000 square feet, requires 10 MW of power for the computing infrastructure. A 100,000 square foot data center of tomorrow will require 50 MW of power for the computing infrastructure. Energy required to dissipate this heat will be an additional 20 MW. A hundred thousand square foot planetary scale data center, with five thousand 10 KW racks, would cost ∼$44 million per year (@ $100/MWh) just to power the servers & $18 million per year to power the cooling infrastructure for the data center. Cooling design considerations by virtue of proper layout of racks can yield substantial savings in energy. This paper shows an overview of a data center cooling design and presents the results of a case study where layout change was made by virtue of numerical modeling to avail efficient use of air conditioning resources.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 767-776 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Publication status | Published - 2002 |
Externally published | Yes |
Event | 8th Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermommechanical phenomena in Electronic Systems - San Diego, CA, United States Duration: 30 May 2002 → 1 Jun 2002 |
Conference
Conference | 8th Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermommechanical phenomena in Electronic Systems |
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Country/Territory | United States |
City | San Diego, CA |
Period | 30/05/02 → 1/06/02 |
Keywords
- Data center
- Modeling
- Provisioning
- Thermal management