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How 'hot' data centres can cook your goose – and IT equipment

How 'hot' data centres can cook your goose – and IT equipment

By:  Patrick Thibodeau  On: 27 May 2007 For: IT World Canada Creator

An overheated data centre can cook one's IT equipment - literally, and land an IT manager in a hot spot. To try to avoid unpleasant surprises, IT managers are increasingly investing in computer-aided studies that map the airflow in data centers.

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When Roger Hardy, IT director for the city of Jeffersonville, Ind., gets an alert from an automated monitoring system that his data centre air conditioning is failing, he has 20 minutes to fix the system before the computer room's temperature reaches what he describes as its "death point."

If the thermometer inside the data centre hits 33 degrees celsius, Jeffersonville's IT equipment is cooked -- literally.

That's what happened this month when the city lost US$20,000 worth of equipment after its strained air conditioning system shut down during a spell of warm weather.

Hardy, who is the sole IT worker for the community of about 29,000 residents, was getting the approval of city officials this week for adding more chiller capacity.

That wasn't an IT problem he expected when he took the job in Jeffersonville last December, since the city built a new data centre just last year.

But Hardy's predecessor died very early in the project.

And later construction decisions didn't fully account for future cooling needs, Hardy said, adding that it wasn't until after he was hired that he discovered that the new computer room had only a fraction of the required cooling capacity.

To try to avoid unpleasant surprises like the one that occurred in Jeffersonville, IT managers are increasingly investing in computer-aided studies that map the airflow in data centres -- similar to the computational fluid dynamics studies that automotive or aircraft manufacturers use to see how air moves around objects.

Even if an IT facility has ample cooling capacity, it could still have heat problems if equipment isn't properly arranged.

High-density systems such as blade servers are particularly vulnerable to airflow problems.

But airflow studies can cost as much as US$150,000, said Mark Evanko, president and principal engineer at Edison, N.J.-based Bruns-Pak Corp., which conducts computational fluid dynamics studies as part of its data center engineering and design services.

The studies can be complicated, Evanko said. Assembling the data for a computerized model can involve going from rack to rack and verifying every aspect of airflow in a data centre, he said. The modeling also has to be able to account for possible changes in a data centre's configuration.

Question of effectiveness

In addition, there is debate about how effective the computational fluid dynamics studies are within data centers. Studies of airflow "look good," said John Musilli, a data centre operations manager at Intel Corp.

"But at the end of the day, it only works when you have a pristine design."

Musilli, who also is a member of the Data Centre Institute think tank within the AFCOM professional association for data center managers, said that as soon as users begin adding equipment to data centres or moving systems around, it creates turbulence that can upset the airflow models.


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Patrick Thibodeau Patrick Thibodeau covers SaaS and enterprise applications, outsourcing, government IT policies, data centers and IT workforce issues for Computerworld. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @DCgov , or subscribe to Pa... more

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