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Data Center
Educational Article

Extending the Capacity of the Data Center Using Hot or Cold Aisle Containment

What correlation does consistent supply air across the face of the rack have to do with increased data center capacity?

Hot or Cold Aisle Containment can significantly increase the capacity of a data center when all U’s are fully populated due to consistent intake temperatures across the rack face.

Additionally, when cooling energy can be converted to IT equipment this too can elongate the life of a data center that is running out of power.

Problem Statement – Air Stratification
Most data centers without containment have air stratification. Air stratification occurs when supply and return air mix. This creates several temperature layers along the intake face of the rack. It is not uncommon for the temperature at the bottom of the rack to be 8 to 10 degrees colder than the top. As a result, many data centers have implemented policies that do not allow the top 6 to 8 U’s to be populated. This can decrease the data centers IT equipment capacity by 16%. Capacity from a space perspective is one thing, but when the unpopulated U’s are potentially high density systems the lost space is amplified.

Data Center
Success Story

Datacenter Revamps Cut Energy Costs At CenturyLink

by Timothy Prickett Morgan — EnterpriseTech Datacenter Edition

Subzero Engineering’s Containment Solutions contributed to Century Links hefty return on investment

It is probably telling that these days datacenter managers think of the infrastructure under their care more in terms of the juice it burns and not by counting the server, storage, and switch boxes that consume that electricity and exhale heat. Ultimately, that power draw is the limiting factor in the scalability of the datacenter and using that power efficiently can boost processing and storage capacity and also drop profits straight to the bottom line.

Three years ago, just as it was buying public cloud computing provider Savvis for $2.5 billion, CenturyLink took a hard look at its annual electric bill, which was running at $80 million a year across its 48 datacenters. At the time, CenturyLink had just finished acquiring Qwest Communications, giving it a strong position in the voice and data services for enterprises and making it the third largest telecommunications company in the United States. CenturyLink, which is based in Monroe, Louisiana, also provides Internet service to consumers and operates the PrimeTV and DirectTV services; it has 47,000 employees and generated $18.1 billion in revenues in 2013.

One of the reasons why CenturyLink has been able to now expand to 57 datacenters – it just opened up its Toronto TR3 facility on September 8 – comprising close to 2.6 million square feet of datacenter floor space is that it started tackling the power and cooling issues three years ago.

The facilities come in various shapes and sizes, explains Joel Stone, vice president of global data center operations for the CenturyLink Technology Solutions division. Some are as small as 10,000 square feet, others are more than ten times that size. Two of its largest facilities are located in Dallas, Texas, weighing in at 110,000 and 153,700 square feet and both rated at 12 megawatts. The typical facility consumes on the order of 5 megawatts. CenturyLink uses some of that datacenter capacity to service its own telecommunications and computing needs, but a big chunk of that power goes into its hosting and cloud businesses which in turn provide homes for the infrastructure of companies from every industry and region. CenturyLink’s biggest customers come from the financial services, healthcare, online games, and cloud businesses, Stone tells EnterpriseTech. Some of these customers have only one or two racks of capacity, whole others contract for anywhere from 5 megawatts to 7 megawatts of capacity. Stone’s guess is that all told, the datacenters have hundreds of thousands of servers, but again, that is not how CenturyLink, or indeed any datacenter facility provider, is thinking about it. What goes in the rack is the customers’ business, not CenturyLink’s.

“We are loading up these facilities and trying to drive our capacity utilization upwards,” says Stone. And the industry as a whole does not do a very good job of this. Stone cites statistics from the Uptime Institute, which surveyed colocation facilities, wholesale datacenter suppliers, and enterprises actually use only around 50 percent of the power that comes into the facilities. “We are trying to figure out how we can get datacenters packed more densely. Space is usually the cheapest part of the datacenter, but the power infrastructure and the cooling mechanicals are where the costs reside unless you are situated in Manhattan where space is such a premium. We are trying to drive our watts per square foot higher.”

While server infrastructure is getting more powerful in terms of core counts and throughput and storage is getting denser and, in the case of flash-based or hybrid flash-disk arrays, are getting faster, the workloads are growing faster and therefore the overall power consumption for the infrastructure as a whole in the datacenter continues to grow.

“People walk into datacenters and they have this idea that they should be cold – but they really shouldn’t be,” says Stone. “Servers operate optimally in the range of 77 to 79 degrees Fahrenheit. If you get much hotter than that, then the server fans have to kick on or you might have to move more water or chilled air. The idea is to get things optimized. You want to push as little air and flow as little water as possible. But there is no magic bullet that will solve this problem.”

Companies have to do a few things at the same time to try to get into that optimal temperature zone, and CenturyLink was shooting for around 75 degrees at the server inlet compared to 68 degrees in the initial test in the server racks at a 65,0000 square foot datacenter in Los Angeles. Here’s a rule of thumb: For every degree Fahrenheit that the server inlet temperature was raised in the datacenter, it cut the power bill by 2 percent. You can’t push it too far, of course, or you will start impacting the reliability of the server equipment. (The supplied air temperature in this facility was 55 degrees and the server inlet temperature was 67 degrees before the energy efficiency efforts got under way.)

The first thing is to control the airflow in the datacenter better, and the second is to measure the temperature of the air more accurately at the server so cooling can be maintained in a more balanced way across the facility.

CenturyLink started work on hot aisle and cold aisle containment in its facilities three and a half years ago, and the idea is simple enough: keep the hot air coming from the back of the racks from mixing with the cold air coming into the datacenter from chillers. The containment project is a multi-year, multi-million dollar effort, and CenturyLink is working with a company called SubZero Engineering to add containment to its aisles. About 95 percent of its facilities now have some form of air containment, and most of them are doing hot aisle containment.

“If we can isolate the hot aisles, that gives us a little more ride through from the cold aisles if we were to have some sort of event,” Stone explains. But CenturyLink does have some facilities that, just by the nature of their design, do cold aisle containment instead. (That has the funny effect of making the datacenter feel hotter because people walk around the hot aisles instead of the cold ones and sometimes gives the impression that these are more efficient. But both approaches improve efficiency.) The important thing about the SubZero containment add-ons to rows of racks, says Stone, is that they are reusable and reconfigurable, so as customers come and go in the CenturyLink datacenters they can adjust the containment.

Once the air is contained, then you can dispense cold air and suck out hot air on a per-row basis and fine-tune the distribution of air around the datacenter. But to do that, you need to get sensors closer the racks. Several years ago, it was standard to have temperature sensors mounted on the ceiling, walls, or columns of datacenters, but more recently, after starting its aisle containment efforts, CenturyLink tapped RF Code to add its wireless sensor tags to the air inlets on IT racks to measure their temperature precisely rather than using an average of the ambient air temperature from the wall and ceiling sensors. This temperature data is now fed back into its building management system, which comes from Automated Logic Control, a division of the United Technologies conglomerate. (Stone said that Eaton and Schneider Electric also have very good building management systems, by the way.)

The energy efficiency effort doesn’t stop here. CenturyLink is not looking at retrofitting its CRAC and CRAH units – those are short for Computer Room Air Conditioner and Computer Room Air Handler – with variable speed drives. Up until recently, CRAC and CRAH units were basically on or off, but now they can provide different levels of cooling. Stone says that running a larger number of CRAH units at a lower speeds provides better static air pressure in the datacenter and uses less energy than having a small number of larger units running faster. (In the latter case, extra cooling capacity is provided through extra units, and in the former it is provided by ramping up the speed of the CRAH units rather than increasing their number.) CenturyLink is also looking at variable speed pumps and replacing cooling towers fans in some facilities.

“We are taking a pragmatic, planned approach across our entire footprint, and we have gone into the areas where we are paying the most for power or have the highest datacenter loads and tackling those facilities first,” says Stone. The energy efficiency efforts in the CenturyLink datacenters have to have a 24 month ROI for them to proceed.

In its Chicago CH2 datacenter (one of three around that Midwestern metropolis and one of the largest run by CenturyLink in its fleet of facilities), it did aisle containment, RF Code sensors, variable speed CRAC units, variable speed drives on the pumps, and replaced the cooling tower fans with more aerodynamic units that ran slower and yet pulled the more air through the cooling towers. This facility, which is located out near O’Hare International Airport, has 163,747 square feet of datacenter space, has a total capacity of 17.6 megawatts, and can deliver 150 watts per square foot.

CenturyLink reduced the load in that CH2 facility by 7.4 million kilowatt-hours per year, and Stone just last month collected on a $534,000 rebate check from Commonwealth Edison, the power company in the Chicago area. All of these upgrades in the CH2 facility cost roughly $2.4 million, and with the rebates and the power savings the return on investment was on the order of 21 months – and that is before the rebate was factored in.

Data Center
Product Insight

Don’t cage your computer!

Subzero Engineering is partnering with Colo providers in creating cageless solutions for their customers.

Here’s what we are doing. We have combined Subzero’s aisle end doors, with auto close and locking features, along with airflow management cabinets that safely lock each cabinet to create a safe Colo environment that does not require cages.

• Locking Aisle End Doors
• Locking Cabinets
• Auto Close
• Complete Airflow Separation

Advances in containment and cabinets have created a fully secure colo environment without traditional wired cages. Instead secure aisle end doors, retractable roofs, and biometric locks create an easy to deploy, secure space for IT equipment.

A typical deployment includes:

• Locks can range from simple keyed, to biometric
• Auto closing doors that prevent accidental access
• Locking aisle end doors
• Locking cabinets
• Retractable roof system

Data Center
Educational Article

California Title 24 – It’s a Hole in One!

About Title 24

On July 1, 2014 California’s new energy efficiency standards went into effect. Title 24 will require, among other things 1) prohibiting reheat in computer rooms and 2) containment in large, high-density data centers with air-cooled computers. In order to prevent hot air from mixing with air that’s been mechanically chilled, data centers will need to modify their existing facilities to provide hot and cold aisle containment.

Why is Title 24 a good thing for data centers everywhere?

Data centers worldwide can benefit from the research done by the State of California. For instance, California determined that a 20,000 sq. ft. data center with a load of 100 Watts per sq. ft. could save up to a whopping $10,500,000 per year on energy expenses by implementing four energy efficient strategies. Imagine the potential savings when a nationwide effort is made?

State Requirements Vs. Corporate Initiative

No doubt state requirements are a great way to get companies to comply with new efficiency standards. That said, most states don’t have the requirements that California has. Should this cause corporations to lower their green initiatives? Of course not! Containment is an easy way to save money and make a contribution to lowering their carbon footprint. Hundreds of companies have installed containment systems, saved money, and increased the reliability of their cooling solution. Why not your company?

What’s next?

While many data centers have an ‘area’ of containment, the real energy savings only comes when all of the cooling air is separated from supply, to return – site wide. This requires a data center wide containment solution. Check out the ways Subzero Engineering has addressed the many aspects of data center wide containment.

Join California and dozens of other companies who have made a commitment to a site-wide containment solution.

Data Center
Success Story

NYI Rolls Out New Cold Aisle Containment System Within Data Centers

New York, NY

Deployment of Cold Aisle Containment Technology Reduces Energy Usage and Optimizes Equipment Performance

a New York company specializing in customized technology infrastructure solutions, announces today the deployment of Cold Aisle technology to its US data center facilities. As part of an initiative to implement the latest energy efficiency technologies, NYI is working closely with The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), sharing the state agency’s mission of exploring innovative energy solutions in ways that improve New York’s economy and environment. NYI’s CAC deployment is made possible through its partner, Subzero Engineering, a designer, manufacturer, and installer of custom, intelligent containment systems and products for data centers, worldwide.

Data Center Cold Aisle Containment fully separates the cold supply airflow from the hot equipment exhaust air. This simple separation creates a uniform and predictable supply temperature to the intake of IT equipment and a warmer, drier return air to the AC coil. Hot aisle and cold aisle containment are primary ways today’s leading businesses, like NYI, help reduce the use of energy and optimize equipment performance within their data centers.

“By adopting Cold Aisle Containment, NYI is increasing air efficiencies within its facilities, thereby translating to increased uptimes, longer hardware life and valuable cost and energy savings for NYI customers,” comments Lloyd Mainers, Engineer for Subzero Engineering. “Through efficiency, CAC also allows for the availability of additional capacity and increased load density, paving the way for higher density customer deployments.”

“When it comes to data center capacity, NYI is constantly monitoring our power density levels to ensure that we are spreading the capacity throughout our data centers most efficiently and decreasing our effect on the environment,” adds Mark Ward, Director of Business Development of NYI. “Cold Aisle Containment helps us to attain that level of efficiency, and not to mention, there are several government and cash incentives for incorporating it into our facilities. Above all, our customers benefit in that their equipment is cooled more effectively, reducing strain on the equipment’s own cooling mechanism and extending the lifespan of their servers.”

NYI Cold Aisle Containment Benefits include:

• Predictable, reliable, and consistent temperature to IT equipment at any point inside the aisle
• One (1) degree temperature difference from top to bottom
• Double or triple kW per rack
• Reduced white space requirements through optimized server racks
• Average of 30% energy cost savings
• Consistent, acceptable supply to IT intake
• Leaves more power available for IT equipment; increased equipment uptime
• Longer hardware life
• Increased fault tolerance (i.e. HVAC units that were required to achieve certain temperature goals are now redundant.)
• US Department of Energy recommended

Company
Press Release

Lights, Camera, Action!

Get the popcorn out, it’s time to watch some videos!

Subzero Engineering presents 12 new videos. Learn more about: NFPA compliant containment, new cageless containment bundles, our new auto closer with soft close features, hear from attendees at the Data Center World in Las Vegas, and much more.

Videos are a great way to see product, learn about product features and benefits from the people who created them, see product form and function, and hear from industry experts about their thoughts on product value.

Look for Bernard the bear photo bombs!

Data Center
Product Insight

Check out our new fully NFPA compliant retractable roof system!

This game changing roof system ensures that the containment roof obstruction is fully removed electronically when a smoke detector is alarmed.

Additional benefits include the ability to wirelessly open the roof for maintenance above the containment, modular design allowing for increase or decrease of size, ease of deployment, and the sleek look of the roof is easy on the eyes. This is the ultimate containment roof system.

Polar Cap Retractable Roof Available Fall of 2014!

The patented Subzero Engineering Polar Cap is the first fully NFPA compliant containment roof system that attaches to the top of the racks and forms a ceiling that prevents hot and cold air from mixing.

Most data center containment systems rely on the heat generated from a fire related incident to release the containment system, as it can pose an obstacle to the fire suppression agent. The NFPA has determined that it is important to have a faster response time and more importantly, a testable system.

The updated Subzero Polar Cap retractable roof system is now a fully electric roof system that retracts into a metal housing when the fire suppression system is alarmed. Having a pre-action system that reacts to a smoke detector will ensure that the containment roof is fully retracted long before the fire suppression system is discharged. Additionally, the roof material is made with the highest fire resistant standard of ASTM E-84 Class A rating.

The Polar Cap can also be opened and closed when maintenance is required above the containment space.

The new roof system is fully customizable in both length (up to 30’) and width (up to 5’). The aluminum profile is less than 6” high and thus it presents no problem with obstructions above the cabinets.

Data Center
Product Insight

Mind the Gap – The importance of gap-free data center containment door systems

By Subzero Engineering CEO, Larry Mainers

We need a “Mind the gap” philosophy in airflow management, especially containment doors.

No visit to London England is complete without seeing the London Underground, or as it is affectionately called “The Tube”. The tube connects the greater part of London with 270 stations. It’s an easy and inexpensive way to get around London town.

In 1969 an audible and/or visual warning system was added to prevent passengers’ feet from getting stuck between the platform and the moving train. The phrase “Mind the gap” was coined and has become associated with the London Underground ever since.

“Mind the gap” had been imitated all over the world. You will find versions of it in France, Hong Kong, Singapore, New Delhi, Greece, Sweden, Seattle, Brazil, Portugal, New York, Sydney, Berlin, Madrid, Amsterdam, Buenos Aires, and Japan.

It is my hope that this phrase can be embraced by the data center industry. Gaps in airflow management and especially when containment is deployed are an easy way to lose both energy and overall cooling effectiveness. We need a “Mind the gap” philosophy in airflow management, especially containment doors. Why doors? Because of the door’s moving parts it is less expensive for manufacturers to leave a gap then to have a door that fully seals. Data center managers who “Mind the gap” should insist on door systems that don’t leak.

Just how important is it to “Mind the gap” in your data center containment system? One way to see the importance of eliminating gaps is to take a look around your own house. How many acceptable gaps do you have around your windows? Do you conclude that since the window is keeping most of the conditioned air inside that a few gaps around the windows will not matter much? I doubt it. The fact is, utility companies have been known to provide rebates for the use of weather stripping to ensure a ll gaps are filled. Gaps equal waste. Over time any waste, no matter how small, ends up being substantial.

Gaps become an even more important area to fill when you consider that most contained aisles are under positive pressure. Positive pressure can increase the leakage fourfold. A cold aisle that is oversupplied should move air through IT equipment and not aisle end doors.

It’s important that we all “Mind the gap” in our data center containment doors. In this way we both individually and collectively save an enormous amount of energy, just as the world’s mass transit systems, like ‘The Tube’, do for us each and every day.

Company
Events

Data Center World Spring 2014 Conference was a blast!

We had a great time at the Data Center World Spring 2014 Conference.

We met with some amazing people, showed off our new products, worked with a fantastic film crew, learned how to apply for and receive utility rebates with environmental monitoring from Larry Mainers, and enjoyed some of the fun that is Las Vegas.

It was such a great show that we have decided to go to the Orlando Conference – October 19-22. We hope to see you there!

Click here to see some the pictures from the conference on our Facebook page.

Data Center
Press Release

What’s new at Subzero Engineering for 2014

At Subzero Engineering we are always looking for new ways to improve our products, by making them more energy efficient, NFPA compliant, and adding more standard features. 

This year is no exception!

We have been working hard taking our world class products and ma king them even better. Here are a few of the changes we are making for 2014.

Product Announcements

• New Polar Cap Retractable Roof – The first fully NFPA compliant containment roof system
• New Arctic Enclosure Sizes Available – Two new 48U cabinets available
• Power Management – We now offer a full line of Raritan power products
• New Elite Series Doors – All of our doors have a sleek new design & come with extra features, standard
• New Panel Options – 3MM Acrylic, 4MM Polycarbonate, 3MM FM4910