Tuesday, March 29th 2022
GIGABYTE Announces Data Center Liquid Immersion Cooling
GIGABYTE Technology, today announced participation in KDDI's one-phase immersion cooling proof of concept that demonstrates how alternative cooling solutions in data centers are needed and should be environmentally minded. Through this joint venture it is possible to sustain high-performance, improve the environmental impact, and reduce costs; all while doing so in a self-contained portable container. KDDI approached technology partners, such as GIGABYTE, to explore ways to bridge various disciplines to achieve the goal of an environmentally sustainable data center. GIGABYTE was keen to assist and had been monitoring and developing immersion cooling systems over the last decade.
Staring data centers in the face is one of their great challenges, and that is how to rectify the increasing power density in traditional data centers and deploy edge computing solutions. Companies are increasing reliant on cloud services and consumers expect fast streaming media and real-time results, but all of this adds work in the data center. Even if the power density reaches an acceptable balance with performance and cooling, can it be implemented in data centers with a higher consideration for the environment and operate more efficiently? That is the crux of the matter as more novel solutions must come out or the problem will only be compounded. Using liquid immersion cooling it is possible to achieve a PUE (power usage effectiveness) of 1.2-1.3, which is far better than the PUE of 1.7 found in air-cooled data centers today. PUE is an important metric to use as it determines the energy efficiency of a data center. If a data center is able to reach a PUE of 1.2-1.3 then it can reduce power consumption by 30-50%.GIGABYTE is not new to this immersion cooling frontier and recently it was announced that a famous IC foundry worked with suppliers including GIGABYTE and 3M to create an immersion cooling solution (source). This solution was installed at the company's fab where it is doing pilot runs and it is expected to make great reductions in power consumption, citing as much as 400 million kWh/year by 2030. For the various choices of efficient immersion cooling, GIGABYTE servers can be quickly modified to be in compliance with project requirements.
Source:
GIGABYTE
Staring data centers in the face is one of their great challenges, and that is how to rectify the increasing power density in traditional data centers and deploy edge computing solutions. Companies are increasing reliant on cloud services and consumers expect fast streaming media and real-time results, but all of this adds work in the data center. Even if the power density reaches an acceptable balance with performance and cooling, can it be implemented in data centers with a higher consideration for the environment and operate more efficiently? That is the crux of the matter as more novel solutions must come out or the problem will only be compounded. Using liquid immersion cooling it is possible to achieve a PUE (power usage effectiveness) of 1.2-1.3, which is far better than the PUE of 1.7 found in air-cooled data centers today. PUE is an important metric to use as it determines the energy efficiency of a data center. If a data center is able to reach a PUE of 1.2-1.3 then it can reduce power consumption by 30-50%.GIGABYTE is not new to this immersion cooling frontier and recently it was announced that a famous IC foundry worked with suppliers including GIGABYTE and 3M to create an immersion cooling solution (source). This solution was installed at the company's fab where it is doing pilot runs and it is expected to make great reductions in power consumption, citing as much as 400 million kWh/year by 2030. For the various choices of efficient immersion cooling, GIGABYTE servers can be quickly modified to be in compliance with project requirements.
11 Comments on GIGABYTE Announces Data Center Liquid Immersion Cooling
here is the link, if anybody is interested -->
ahhhhh i remember the "oil builds" we made with a friend back in the early 2000, messy to say the least :laugh:
For the Single Phase solution they are working with Submer.
They also offer 2 Phase solutions but that is usually base on the 3M coolant Actually the Submer solution is base on mineral oil.
One clarification here. If you se bubbles on the pictures, that is 2phase immersion cooling.
I took a look to this tech a year ago. It is very interesting for data centers. Also if you are into sustainable and efficient designs and you realized ( or somebody told you ) air cooling has a limit , and we are getting very close to it. yessss
techplanet.today/post/the-history-of-water-cooling
The retrofitting of the current hardware is not that complicated
The oils they user are way more safe than water cooling.
The problems that I found are more related with guaranties from the hardware providers. But that is something you can agree with your provider. Actually the hardware is more protected when using this solution than using air cooling, or water cooling.
well as for air cooling ... true ... (although my ETS-T50 is performing quite close to what my H115i achieved before )
Imagine, a full-submersion test bench?
If I recall correctly, many of the formulations of the fluids 'flash off' @ ambient atmospheric pressure and even have been used in passive phase-change cooling loops. The stuff is amazing.
Being a highly stable fluorine-based fluid, I'd imagine it's quite safe *until* it contacts an electrical arc, open flame, or incandescent surface. That little tidbit is probably the reason we can't have this stuff in the consumer-prosumer market; too easy to accidentally decompose some into extremely toxic gases.