4.8 Article

Energy, exergy and computing efficiency based data center workload and cooling management

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 299, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.117050

Keywords

Data center; Workload assignment; HVAC; Energy analysis; Exergy analysis; Multi-objective optimization

Funding

  1. McMaster University
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada through a Collaborative Research and Development (CRD) [CRDPJ514338-17]

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This study presents a new approach to optimize workload distribution in multi-rack data centers by considering coefficient of performance, exergy efficiency, and computing performance. The findings reveal the physics behind two-dimensional workload management in multi-rack data centers and provide a framework for balancing trade-offs between different objectives.
The rapidly rising computing workloads in data centers (DCs) have necessitated new approaches to ensure effective performance and resilience that minimize the associated cooling energy. The literature on thermallyaware workload management provides strategies to reduce this energy cost, while typically ignoring the reduction in cooling capacity due to thermodynamic irreversibility and computing performance per unit energy consumption. Hence, we provide an approach that considers coefficient of performance COPc, exergy efficiency eta ex, and a new metric, computing performance ratio CPR. In contrast to existing methods that consider one-dimensional workload distributions, the temperature predictions from a physics-based zonal model are used to optimize cooling for two-dimensional workload distributions in a multi-rack DC. The investigation reveals physics associated with two-dimensional workload management for multi-rack DCs, provides a framework for trade-offs between COPc, eta ex, and CPR, explains the influence of IT load factor LF on different objectives, and describes how parameters obtained from single- and multi-objective problems can vary. Our findings show that COPc, and eta ex can be improved by up to 20% and 8% by regulating the chilled water temperature and airflow setpoints while increasing the LF degrades the CPR by 7.5%. These results enable an extended approach for heterogeneous LF management in large-scale DCs.

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