Advancing Sustainability in Data Centers: Evaluation of Hybrid Air/Liquid Cooling Schemes for IT payload using Sea Water

Abstract

The growth in cloud computing, big data, AI and -performance computing (HPC) necessitate the deployment of additional data centers (DC's) with high energy demands. The unprecedented increase in the Thermal Design Power (TDP) of the computing chips will require innovative cooling techniques. Furthermore, DC's are increasingly limited in their ability to add powerful GPU servers by power capacity constraints. As cooling energy use accounts for up to 40% of DC energy consumption, creative cooling solutions are urgently needed to allow deployment of additional servers, enhance sustainability and increase energy efficiency of DC's. The information in this study is provided from Start Campus' Sines facility supported by Alfa Laval for the heat exchanger and CO2 emission calculations.The study evaluates the performance and sustainability impact of various data center cooling strategies including an air-only deployment and a subsequent hybrid air/water cooling solution all utilizing sea water as the cooling source. We evaluate scenarios from 3MW to 15+1MW of IT load in 3MW increments which correspond to the size of heat exchangers used in the Start Campus' modular system design. This study also evaluates the CO2 emissions compared to a conventional chiller system for all the presented scenarios. Results indicate that the effective use of the sea water cooled system combined with liquid cooled systems improve the efficiency of the DC, plays a role in decreasing the CO2 emissions and supports in achieving sustainability goals.

Description

Keywords

Cloud Computing, Data center Sustainability, Energy Efficiency, Hybrid Cooling Technologies, Liquid Cooled Technologies

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