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Best practices for reducing server room cooling costs

Tips For Reducing Your Server Room Cooling Costs

Use perforated raised access floor panels in cold rows

Hot Cold Aisles in Server Room Cooling
Hot Cold Aisles
(Click to Enlarge)

The old design approach called for placing perforated raised access floor panels below the cabinet to force air into the cabinet. Servers at the bottom of the cabinet stayed cool but servers at the top could overheat. Now, we know that air does not flow from bottom to top but from front to back in racked server environments; therefore, a hot row/cold row design makes more sense. Placing perforated raised access floor panels in the aisles in front of the servers forces the cold air to go through the front of the racked servers, giving all servers from top to bottom access to cold air. The servers draw the cold air in through the front, which more evenly cools the server components, and passes the heated air through the back of the server. The hot air rises and is captured by the data center air conditioning unit.

Run network cabling over the tops of cabinets

In the past, network cabling was run below the floor tiles and into the bottom of the cabinet. This design restricted under-tile airflow in environments where lots of under-floor cabling was present. Depending on the number of cables and the size of the hole below the cabinet, an uneven amount of air was released into each cabinet. Today, it's clear that network cabling runs and cabling changes occur more frequently than power cabling, so running the network cables over the tops of cabinets makes it easier for service providers to access, run, drop, trace and pull cables. Eliminating under-floor network cables also helps to even out the distribution of cooling through the server room, which means that the air conditioner will need to run less.

Use wire mesh raceways to hold network cables

In server rooms built years ago, cables were almost always run in troughs beneath the floor. Large holes had to be cut in the troughs and in the floor tiles to feed the network cables into the cabinet. The new approach calls for installing wire mesh raceways (cable trays) above the cabinets. Service providers can drop as few or as many cables through the wire mesh raceway as needed by a specific cabinet; heat goes through the wire mesh raceway instead of around it. However, put the raceway at least 4 inches above the cabinet rather than on it so that you can remove the cabinet without removing the raceway.

Load cabinets with equal numbers of servers

The more units in a cabinet, the more power they require, and that means more heat is generated. Note which cabinets are full -- you will notice that they generate more heat and are usually clustered together. An imbalance in the racks can force one air handler (air conditioner) to work harder than another across the room, because air handlers in a data center work most efficiently when they work together to standardize the power supplied to each cabinet. Evenly loading cabinets with servers will regulate the load between the air handlers and result in lower cooling costs. A good rule of thumb is to limit the maximum peak load per rack to around 8.5 kW and the average working load to 5.4 kW.

Use solid wall cabinets

In the old design, cabinets had holes in the tops and bottoms, and the sides were often removed in multi-cabinet installations. This meant that a large row of cabinets might not have sides except on the ends. As more servers were added to the cabinets, the airflow had to find the path of least resistance to get to the top of the cabinets. This caused some cabinets to be overly cool while others might overheat. Today's rack-mounted servers are designed to cool from the front to the back. Service providers who use solid wall cabinets force the air to come in through the front of the cabinet and exit through the back. These server racks minimize the number and size of holes in the bottom, top or sides of the cabinet, ensuring that the airflow through the racked servers is consistent.

Use a high efficiency heat pump and air conditioner

Modern, high efficiency ductless heat pumps and air conditioners provide cooling at much lower energy costs than traditional ducted systems. The wide range of sizes and mounting options (ceiling, wall mount, etc) make installation in server rooms easier and less expensive than centralized systems.

Ductless.ca has solutions to satisfy all of your server room & data center cooling needs. Please call (416) 421-0200 or use our quote request form to see how we can help you today.


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