July-August 2009

Data Centers and DG

IT facilities, which are making great strides in improving energy efficiency, are a natural fit for onsite power generation.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo:Sun Microsystems

Additional Article Content

By Don Talend

Comments


“This idea of delivering cold air underneath the floor and expecting that cold air to rise runs counter to the laws of physics,” says Seese of traditional data center cooling system design. He explains that the team focused on minimizing the number of required turns in the distribution of chilled air.

In contrast to a typical data center—where air is delivered beneath a raised floor, makes immediate right-angle turns, and travels across the floor before making another right-angle turn, and finds its way up through perforated floor tiles in front of the computer equipment—the new facility will draw air through the outside air louvers, and the drawn-in air will follow a straight path through filters and cooling coils to the equipment floor. The equipment floor is pressurized so that the temperature of the air from the floor to the ceiling is constant—eliminating the hot and cold air mixing that is found in typical data centers.

Additionally, the team designed a “hot-aisle containment system” that pressurizes air and exhausts equipment-generated heat from the facility to prevent it from mixing with the cooler air. Doors were installed at the end of hot aisles to contain the heat produced by the equipment and blown out the back of the equipment by fans. “Cold aisles” are in the front of the equipment and back up to an enclosure that captures and exhausts the hot air. Roofs were constructed above the servers and chimneys were constructed on top of the roofs. Above the chimneys are plenums with variable frequency drive (VFD)-equipped fans that draw the air in the hot aisles upward and exhaust it.

“At certain times of the year, the [outside] air is too cold, so we allow the hot air to come back in and mix with the cold air coming in from outside to temper it down to 70 to 72 degrees,” says Seese. “The other thing it does is allow us to cool air based on its temperature. The outside air can get to 104 degrees, and our return air could be 95-degree air. It makes more sense for us to cool the 95-degree air, because it requires less energy.

Phot:o: NetApp
Exterior view of louver wall used to bring filtered air into the NetApp facility for cooling
“The other thing we’ve done is completely eliminate 90-degree turns in water delivery, and that is obviously done for the purpose of making the water run much more efficiently and smoothly, and reduces our pump energy significantly,” adds Seese.

The resulting higher efficiency, he says, allows the delivery of 55°F water to the chillers, rather than the typical 45°F water. Energy consumption is 0.32–0.35 kW per ton, rather than the typical 0.6 kW per ton. Overall, Seese notes, all of the power consumption, except for 12%, is for the purpose of powering the IT equipment.

The facility also features a UPS that relies on a 3-ton flywheel, rather than Direct Current (DC) batteries for backup power. Seese points out that the flywheel is about 3% more efficient than the best available batteries, which are about 94% efficient, according to a Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory survey relating to double-conversion UPS systems. The flywheel is more efficient than batteries and allows conversion of alternating current from the grid to DC, exclusively for the data center equipment, Seese says. A Hitec motor/generator that is normally powered by a motor at the local utility would be powered by the flywheel at the data center. “The typical data center uses alternating current, turns it into direct current, turns it back into alternating current, and sends it up to the servers, which immediately turn it into direct current,” says Seese, adding that this occurs to charge the batteries and correct any anomalies in the power that will be delivered to the servers.

Advertisement

In addition to turning the generator, the utility power also spins the 3-ton flywheel, which keeps spinning via its own inertia and continues to spin the generator, which, in turn, starts its engine. The engine then engages a clutch that connects the engine to the flywheel and generator, and continues to operate the unit until the utility returns to normal operating condition.

NetApp
Traditionally designed cooling systems indeed are the most significant energy wasters in a data center, indicates Ralph Renne, director of site operations for data storage product and service provider NetApp Inc., Sunnyvale, CA. The company is designing a 14,000–square foot engineering data center for energy efficiency using features such as environmentally friendly flywheel UPS systems, energy-efficient transformers, outside air economizers, and a variable primary chiller plant. The local power company, Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) presented NetApp with a rebate of about $1.43 million under PG&E’s Non-Residential New Construction Program, the largest new construction incentive that it has ever awarded. The company will save an estimated 11.1 million kWh each year, for a savings of more than $1.1 million, and a reduction of carbon dioxide emissions by 3,391 tons annually. The facility is expected to operate at a PUE of less than 1.3. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Distributed Energy Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Distributed Energy email newsletter!