- +
IBM eyes expanded water cooling for data centers 06 February, 2007 11:32:41
IBM is looking to expand the use of water-cooling systems in data centers.IBM researchers are counting on a 40-year-old technology to keep modern, state-of-the-art data centres running cool and allow companies to squeeze more computing power from the electricity they consume. - +
IBM jumps back into water-cooled systems 19 July, 2005 07:15:47
Water-cooled server racks remain a rare thing in data centres. But IBM's move to offer an add-on water-cooling unit for its Intel-based xSeries servers and other systems should increase the technology's visibility as a potential solution to heat problems. - +
Equinix to invest $32 million in second Sydney exchange 31 October, 2007 10:21:45
New centre will be operational in 2008Provider of data centres and Internet exchange services, Equinix plans to open a second exchange in Sydney increasing capacity with the addition of 2,900 square metres of floor space and 650 cabinets. - +
AMD may build a chip plant in India, Ruiz says 30 November, 2007 07:48:20
AMD is warming to the idea of a chip manufacturing plant in India, which would be a boost for India's high tech ambitions.Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is warming to the idea of building a chip manufacturing plant in India, which would be a significant breakthrough for the country's high-tech ambitions. - +
Samsung to produce faster graphics memory next year 04 December, 2007 07:49:20
Samsung next year plans to begin production of a faster graphics memory chip that consumes less power.Samsung Electronics next year plans to begin mass production of a new type of graphics memory that both consumes less power and is significantly faster than existing chips.
Click here for case studies, whitepapers and other useful vendor content Dataract increases e5 Workflow performance with Microsoft® Windows Server® 2008
Bankstown Council streamlines their IT with Microsoft® Windows Server® 2008
NAB works with Avanade® to leverage Microsoft® Windows Server® 2008 for its branch offices
Dimension Data, La Trobe University and Windows Server 2008 partner to improve compliance
Newsletter Subscription
When the University of Illinois' National Center for Supercomputing Applications set out to build a machine with more than 200,000 server cores, the key wasn't simply shelling out cash for newer, faster silicon chips. The trick was harnessing the power of a substance that comes right out of your kitchen sink: water.
Using water to cool servers isn't a new idea, but it is gaining new converts at a time when fears of global warming and rising energy costs are making data center operators and server vendors search for ways to increase efficiency.
To Rob Pennington, deputy director of the NCSA, water cooling offers one huge advantage: power density. The NCSA's planned Blue Waters petascale computing machine will fit more than 200,000 cores in a space that's about twice the size of a current NCSA machine that has 9,600 cores, according to Pennington.
"Water cooling makes it possible," Pennington says. "If we had to do air cooling, we'd be limited by how much air can be blown up through the floor."
Blue Waters will be operational in 2011 and will likely use servers based on IBM's future Power7 chips.
Water cooling is inherently more efficient than air conditioning, Pennington says. That efficiency is being exploited to greater effect with today's multicore processors and multisocket motherboards. When a motherboard had one socket a decade or so ago, the advantage of water cooling didn't mean as much as it does today, when you're typically trying to cool four sockets on the motherboard, he says.
NEC, using Intel Pentium processors, began selling a water-cooled server at the end of 2005. IBM is just returning to water cooling servers after not using the technique since 1995. Big Blue abandoned water cooling after shipping its last bipolar mainframe with CMOS (complementary metal--oxide--semiconductor) technology, according to Ed Seminaro, chief system architect for IBM's Power Systems.
"We actually went from a product that used almost 200 kilowatts of power down to a product that could basically satisfy the same function with about 5,000 watts," Seminaro says. "That's why we didn't need water cooling anymore. There was far less power required and far less heat density."
Times have changed. Last month, IBM added what it calls a hydro-cluster water cooling system to its System p5 575 supercomputer. As the number of transistors on a chip increased over the past decade, IBM wasn't always able to keep power usage steady. So it turned to water cooling with an innovative design that brings water almost right up to the chip.
Why is water so efficient? Because heat from servers eventually gets transferred to water anyway, even in data centers cooled by big chiller air conditioning systems, says Jud Cooley, senior director of engineering for a Sun Microsystems water-cooled product known as the Modular Datacenter. With computer room air conditioning systems, chillers are placed by the racks, and from the resulting hot air, heat is moved into liquid and pumped outside the building, Cooley says.
ARN Member Login
When an IT disaster occurs, how handy it would be to push a button and start again as if nothing had happened.
Discover and learn more about CA XOSoft today.
Satyam’s Q1 revenue up by 43% and Net Profit by 45% YoY; revises revenue and EPS guidance upwards for FY09 18 July, 2008 16:58:00
Informatica Reports Record Second Quarter Results 18 July, 2008 13:01:00
Tumbleweed Releases MailGate 3.6 18 July, 2008 10:01:00
Convergys to Acquire Intervoice, Enhancing Leadership in Relationship Management 17 July, 2008 14:41:00
Borland Management Solutions Put the "M" in Application Lifecycle Management 17 July, 2008 13:43:00
NAB works with Avanade® to leverage Microsoft® Windows Server® 2008 for its branch offices
In 2007, Avanade helped the National Australia Bank use Windows Server 2008 to simplify deployment, maximise the efficiency of their low-bandwidth wide area network and consolidate its IT infrastructure.












