When presenting on how to build a modern data centre, I generally
point to the fact that a data centre should be built for the
machines, not for the humans, and an air temperature of around
26–27 degrees C is fine for most equipment—provided
that the real temperature-dependent items are cooled through
forced, ducted air cooling. If this is combined with hot
aisle/cold aisle or contained rack systems, the warm air can
generally be ducted away to use for space heating elsewhere in
the building—so saving energy and cutting costs, while also
boosting green credentials.
But, this only works well where there is need for heating space
where humans work: fine for the UK during the cold spell we've
been having; not so good for the Middle East, where space cooling
is more of a requirement. However, even these places have a need
for hot water, and it is possible (if a little expensive) to use
a heat pump to extract the low-grade heat from data centre exit
gases and upgrade it to the temperatures required for hot water.
There is, however, an alternative. Back in the good ol' days of
the mainframe, water cooled systems were used extensively, but
fell out of fashion as distributed systems became the norm and
air cooling was seen as being more cost effective. But, energy
costs are getting more unpredictable in the short term, with the
only certainty that, in the longer term, they will go up. At the
same time, equipment densities are creating more hot spots and
less air volume space for effective air cooling to take place.
The cost of designing, implementing and maintaining effective air
cooling systems for today's data centres is getting beyond the
reach of many organisations (and even vendors), and the
possibility of water cooling is once again on the agenda.
In its research laboratories in Zurich, IBM has been
investigating the best way of implementing water cooling for
distributed systems in a modern data centre. It has come up with
a nickel-coated copper block that sits on top of the CPU,
replacing the standard CPU heat fins/fan ensemble. The copper
block is micro-drilled to maximise the cooling capacity of the
water. For blade-based and rack mounted systems, the feeder tubes
to the blocks are routed to the back of the board, and a clever
isolation system is used to ensure that the boards can be hot
swapped without the need for the water system to be shut down and
without any water leakage into the electrical systems.
The cleverest part is that in order to cool a CPU down to the
best working temperature using air requires a massive temperature
difference between the CPU surface and the air—generally
speaking, data centres use air at around 18C to ensure that CPUs
dont heat above 75C. With water being a far better conductor of
heat, the delta can be far less—IBM reckons that using
water at 60C will still maintain a CPU at 75C. Why use water at
60C? This is the temperature of the hot water systems in the
majority of buildings. By using a closed system for the distilled
water needed for the cooling circuit, the exit water at 65
degrees C or higher can be used to provide input heat directly in
to the general hot water supply in the building—saving a
much greater amount of overall energy and therefore cost.
The problem would be if the water supply failed—there would
be far less time to ensure that systems were shut down in order
for the CPUs to remain unharmed. There's also the small problem
of what if a leak did happen: not a problem with air based
systems, but slightly more where water and electricity are
concerned! However, neither of these issues should be
show-stoppers. Self-contained systems can ensure that water is
available in all but the worst case scenarios. Automated systems
can very rapidly shut down servers and leakages can be avoided
through the appropriate use of the right materials and well
engineered plumbing.
Even for large remote data centres and service provider data
centres where there will be little need for hot water in the
building itself, water cooling can have a part to play. Most data
centres will be within a commercial or industrial environment,
and the hot water can be sold or just passed on to those who can
make use of it, depending on whether the organisation wants to
maximise its cost savings or to up its green credentials even
further.
As the cost of power and the density of data centre equipment
both continue to increase, it may be time to take the plunge back
into water cooled systems, and pass the benefit on to the
business through helping keep its hot water needs met.
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