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.

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Photo:Sun Microsystems

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By Don Talend

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“One of the areas in which we achieved a significant portion of this rebate was fundamentally in the mechanical design; I’d say that 90% of the rebate dollars were associated with the energy efficiency measures we implemented from the mechanical cooling,” says Renne, adding that the facility infrastructure was ready in August 2008, and full migration of IT equipment would be completed two or three years later.

A key component of the energy-efficient system was the use of outside air handlers equipped with economizers that bring in outside air for cooling when outside temperatures are favorable. “One of the fundamental ways in which we can achieve efficient mechanical cooling is to not have a mechanical cooling system but, rather, bring in outside air when temperatures allow it and rely on the concept of free cooling,” he says. “Any time the temperature outside is less than 70 degrees Fahrenheit, we can be in a full mechanical economizer mode and effectively shut off our mechanical cooling. Bringing in the outside air allows us to operate very efficiently for greater than 6,000 hours a year—roughly three-quarters of the year.”

To address concerns about humidity and particulates, Renne says, the facility is equipped with a double-filtration system consisting of an exterior louver wall and an economizer damper. The outside air is brought into the facility, where it is delivered to the equipment before an exhaust fan exhausts the heat from the roof of the facility. This system necessitated the construction of a centralized shaft in the building, Renne notes. “We have a convection effect where heat is naturally rising—this is simply pulling some of that heat out and exhausting it, fan-assisted,” he says.

Photo: Advanced Data Centers
View of outside air louvers used to cool the interior of Advanced Data Centers’ first data center
The new facility will have 720 racks of IT equipment and consume about 5.76 MW of power. Cooling it will require not only the creative use of outside air, but also a cold-aisle containment system in which the fronts and back of the racks face each other, says Renne. “Containing the hot and cold aisles allows us to eliminate mixed air,” he adds.

Cold aisles will be contained and the air pressurized, using VFD-equipped exhaust fans. Renne explains that this process will allow the minimization of fan energy, as well as the monitoring of hot- and cold-aisle differential pressure at exhaust ducts.

“We’re able to effectively achieve a 25-degree delta-t [temperature differential] across the coil, meaning the coil is working to its design capacity,” says Renne. “The industry used to believe that IT equipment needed 52-degree air. This is a paradigm shift that I would say has taken place over the past eight to 10 years; IT equipment can handle a much warmer environment. Data center operators fundamentally believed a [myth] that the colder, the better. In the winter, we’re generally below 70 degrees, and it simply allows us to operate our economizers in a much broader range and better leverage the free-cooling concept.”

Photo: Sun Microsystems
Power distribution boxes can be twisted into an overhead power system, reducing the amount of copper wire needed by about half at Sun’s Broomfield facility.
Renne reports that NetApp adopted a philosophy favoring overhead HVAC for data centers long ago. “A raised-floor distribution system has two compounding problems: hot air rises and cold air falls, so a natural benefit of physics is to remove the hot air from overhead and distribute the cold air overhead which allows us to have the convection working in our favor,” he says. “Trying to deliver cold air through a floor and also pull the hot air through the floor has its inherent problems. Raised-floor environments are something we moved away from many years ago.”

Geography plays a role in the move away from raised floors. Renne points out that a 4-foot-high raised floor that was required for NetApp’s nearby enterprise data center was very expensive to construct, given its location in seismic Zone 4.

Another key design feature of the Sunnydale facility is the use of a vari-prime chilled-water distribution system in conjunction with four 600-ton Trane centrifugal chillers, one of which is used as a backup in a system that requires 1,800 tons of chilled water. Renne says that the system allows chiller water temperature modulation at variable flow rates.

“What it allows you to do is reduce the amount of flow under low-load conditions,” he explains. “That’s an advantage, because our pumps can scale back and don’t have to flow at a constant rate. In an efficiency equation, a traditional primary-secondary chiller operates within the 0.53- to 0.56-kW-per-ton range; our chillers are operating in the 0.49-kW-per-ton range.”

Sunnyvale is another data center that relies upon a flywheel-based UPS system consisting of two 900-kV-Amps (kVA) flywheels. The facility is equipped with this type of system “for several reasons,” says Renne. “One, there’s a big efficiency gain with flywheels.”

The flywheels in the facility are 97–98% efficient, which represents an increase of about 6–8% over a traditional wet cell battery inverter system, according to Renne. “But there’s another benefit in the sense that, to have 1,800 kVA of backup capacity in the form of batteries would require a relatively large room, perhaps a dedicated space of 1,200 square feet with associated exhaust fans to remove the off-gassing of the batteries, and that real estate costs an enormous amount of money, especially out here in Sunnyvale. The ancillary benefit is that you don’t have a hazardous material and the costs and concerns with maintaining a battery room, which means you’ve got to replace the batteries within a three- to five-year window.”

A major difference between the Sunnyvale data center UPS and that of other centers, Renne says, is that his flywheels are decoupled from a 2,000-kVA generator serving the IT load and a 1,500-kVA generator serving the HVAC load, whereas many other data centers’ flywheels and generators are coupled. Sunnyvale’s flywheel bridges the time between a utility blackout to the full-speed operation of the generators. At their full design load, the flywheels have stored energy that can support the load for 13-and-a-half seconds. Normally, it takes seven-and-a-half seconds to get the diesel generators up to full power and there is a two-second time delay to allow for power sags.

The facility also uses Powersmiths K4-rated transformers, which, according to Renne, are about 1.5% more efficient than NEMA TP-1-rated transformers. Based on readings on the facility equipment when it resided in another location, he says, Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) was about 10% and K-rated transformers were required in the event that THD exceeded 5% anyway. “The premiums we paid to purchase these transformers really had a compelling return on investment in that they would pay for themselves in less than a one-year timeframe based on full load once the IT space is fully occupied,” says Renne. “It wasn’t too hard to sell the idea to the project management and finance guys, because it had an inherent payback. Then, you’ve got the ongoing savings, and, honestly, the life cycle is probably 20 years for these components, so if we did a life-cycle cost analysis, it would be an enormous amount of savings.”

DG Applicability
The managers of these projects say that a data center is just one example of a facility that is well-suited to a DG system, which can take a burden off of the local power grid. Monroe indicates that using a DG system would be a good fit for data centers, given the move toward energy efficiency. Citing examples such as natural gas-powered microturbines, natural gas–powered fuel cells, solar, wind, or even methane gas from landfills, he argues that DG energy production can be more efficient than the grid.

“A great thing about data centers is that the loads are typically high and steady,” points out Monroe. “The variation in loads is not very great, so a fuel cell or a microturbine power generation system fit hand-in-glove with data centers. Folks are even looking at a [CHP] system as the primary source, and the grid as the backup, instead of the way people do it today—where the grid is primary and we have diesel generators or other systems as the backup.” Monroe adds that he often cites a 2007 EPA CHP cost-savings comparison (see Table 1) in presentations, in which he points out that only about 15% of grid power is available to a data center after transmission, compared with that produced by an onsite gas turbine that might be twice as efficient.

Seese agrees that CHP, in particular, makes sense for onsite data center power production. “In the end, we’re all trying to accomplish the same thing—we’re all trying to get the same benefit from each watt of power that we use,” he says. “Certainly, the CHP approach, where you’re using the heat to cool the facility to run chillers, is a great solution and one that makes a lot of sense when you look at the ability to cool onsite. A lot of the concepts we’re using are the same: reusing the heat in an effective manner. The CHP approach uses the exhaust heat from the electrical plant to chill the facility. I’m very concerned that the generating plant is generating 1 watt of power, and by the time it gets to me it’s one-third of a watt. We’re using two-thirds of our power just in that distance it has to travel in the various substations. I would love to reduce those losses between generation and load. We’re all hopeful that the idea of cogeneration or onsite generation will become more affordable, because it only makes sense in these data centers. We really need to focus more and more on energy savings and onsite generation is going to be part of our solution, I’m convinced.”

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NetApp has experience with DG for data centers. Its enterprise data center has a CHP system that uses a 1,125-kW Hess Microgen cogeneration plant. Waste heat energy is used to produce up to 300 tons of chilled water via adsorption chillers. Renne notes that the system does not serve as a primary power source, but reduces the amount of power necessary from the local utility. During the summer rate season, he says, the company can operate the cogen plant cost effectively.

“It may be a small percentage of total load, but some companies are starting to look at where they can incorporate renewable energy or distributed generation into their data centers,” says Renne. “We’ve done some internal consideration of fuel cells. We look at a fuel cell, and its relatively high density, and—in a compact footprint—it could certainly be utilized to supplement some import of utility power. With the fact that you have a base load, you can really start to look at distributed generation as a whole and have a relatively reliable payback model that I’d say traditional office space doesn’t offer, in the sense that there’s a load factor that’s varying by a very large percentage.”   

Author's Bio: Don Talend of Write Results, is a publicity and communications project manager specializing in technology and innovation.

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