How to improve data center efficiency and reduce wastage

How to improve data center efficiency and reduce wastage

By Khoo Boo Leong | Oct 23, 2009

Basic data center design fault is the greatest contributor to energy wastage. Correcting these basic faults can improve data center efficiency and reduce energy wastage by up to two-thirds, according to Dr. Hsu Ching-I, chairman and CEO of Raritan Inc, a data center infrastructure and power management solutions company.

For example, current data center designs lack consideration for hot and cold aisles, and basic air flow structures. “You’d want to confine the hot air in one space and cold air in another space connected to the heat sink output,” said Hsu. “But now, you have hot air and cold air mixing together so you waste a lot of the power used for cooling. This situation is made worse with high-density blade servers which demand more power than traditional servers.”
 
Blade servers offering high performance/cost ratio and compact size benefits, run hotter than traditional servers and reside in higher-density racks. This places greater demands on data center cooling capacity.
 
Therefore, data center managers have to understand the difference between the rate of heat generation and the rate of heat sinking, anticipate the rate of heat generation, and adjust power for cooling accordingly.
 
Action needed
Fortunately, there are basic measures that can be taken to improve power efficiency and heat dissipation.
 
Start by correcting the basic data center design faults. “That’s within your control and you do not have to spend too much on new technology,” said Hsu. “Once you’ve implemented the basics, then you go on to measure how power is being utilized in the data center, and which equipment is using how much energy and when.”
 
Another practice that contributes to higher energy cost is provisioning power with a high safety factor to ensure reliable and steady power supply. “You need to look at the actual operations picture over time to identify peak usage and apply overcapacity to other areas,” said Hsu. “It’s much more than ensuring uninterrupted operations. And you have to measure exactly how much is consumed instead of relying upon nameplate power capacity specifications.”
 
This requires detailed insight of IT assets and power consumption as well as the capability to deliver secure control of IT assets from any location. Tools to accomplish this include Raritan's PowerIQ energy management software, intelligent power distribution units (PDUs) that measure power usage at the IT device level, environmental sensors, and the dcTrack IT asset and infrastructure management software as well as the CommandCenter Secure Gateway remote access and control management software.
 
With the Dominion PX-4000 rack PDU, for instance, detailed power information on individual blades plugged into the PX intelligent power strip, as well as inlet temperatures at blade racks, can be monitored and measured.
 
Analyze and track
In North America, Raritan recently tied up with Capgemini to help client analyze their current data center environments and recommend a strategic roadmap for an optimized and more energy-efficient IT organization.
 
Specifically, they would use real-time information ranging from IT energy costs to carbon emissions generated by IT devices to rack capacity to take corrective actions and track improvements. They enable servers to be scheduled to "turn on" for additional processing power during peak work periods, then "turned off”. Early warning signs of potential equipment problems are obtained by tracking and collecting data center temperature and humidity information to eliminate hotspots and cool IT racks optimally.
 

 

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <a> <p> <span> <div> <h1> <h2> <h3> <h4> <h5> <h6> <img> <img /> <map> <area> <hr> <br> <br /> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <table> <tr> <td> <em> <b> <u> <i> <strong> <font> <del> <ins> <sub> <sup> <quote> <blockquote> <pre> <address> <code> <cite> <embed> <object> <strike> <caption>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may use <swf file="song.mp3"> to display Flash files inline
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

Comments

I never buy from outlet,

I never buy from outlet, replica handbags
replica bagsthe price is expensive and I always bought online.