Google shares its data center cooling best practice - water and hot aisle containment "hot huts"

Google has an end user friendly explanation of its data center cooling.

Our emphasis on cooling systems might come as a surprise, until you consider how warm a personal computer can become during use. Data centers, which house thousands of computers, need to stay within a specific operating temperature range. Even though we run our facilities hotter than a typical data center, we need cooling systems - both to prevent server breakdowns and to provide a reasonable working environment for technicians working on the data center floor.

After servers, the second largest consumer of power in a data center is the cooling system. We needed a cooling system which minimized our overall energy consumption. For this reason, we designed our own cooling systems from the ground up. 

The interior of a hot hut row

Google uses hot aisle containment (hot huts) creating a higher delta T  across the water cooling coils at the top of the hot huts.

IBM has used water cooling in its supercomputers for years and even used the waste heat for heating homes.

SuperMUC combines its hot-water cooling capability, which removes heat 4,000 times more efficiently than air, with 18,000 energy-efficient Intel Xeon processors. In addition to helping with scientific discovery, the integration of hot-water cooling and IBM application-oriented, dynamic systems management software, allows energy to be captured and reused to heat the buildings during the Winter on the sprawling Leibniz Supercomputing Centre Campus, for savings of one million Euros ($1.25 million USD) per year.

Now for those of you who think Google should use its waste heat to heat homes, there is the problem that Google data centers are not close to residential or commercial businesses that can use the low grade heat.

In some data centers there is a hard fast rule of keeping water out of the data center, but if you want to be the most efficient you need to break some rules.

Google's Data Center Videos, 1 week 2.2mil views vs. 2 1/2 yrs 1.3 mil views

Google made a lot of news with its data center photography and video.

One way to look at how well the videos is to looking at the traffic.  The latest video exceeded the first video in less than a week vs. 2 1/2 years of steady views.

The Latest Video.

Video statistics

Views and discovery

2,228,718

Views
 

Key discovery events

A

First referral from: Google

Oct 11, 2012 - 76,628 views

B

First embedded on: wired.com

Oct 16, 2012 - 53,618 views

The first Container Data Center video in 2009. 

Video statistics

Views and discovery

1,315,216

Views
 

Key discovery events

A

First embedded on: www.google.com

Apr 7, 2009 - 14,171 views

B

First embedded on: blogoscoped.com

Apr 7, 2009 - 15,559 views

Amazon Web Services has another outage, is there a pattern

Amazon Web Services has another outage.  The news is about the sites that are down.

Update: Amazon Web Services Down In North Virginia — Reddit, Pinterest, Airbnb, Foursquare, Minecraft And Others Affected

ROMAIN DILLET

posted 10 hours ago
amazon web services

What started as a small issue affecting some instances of Amazon’s Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) in North Virginia became a full-blown outage of AWS in North Virginia. Major services, such as Reddit, Foursquare, Minecraft and Heroku, are down. GitHub, imgur, Pocket, HipChat, Coursera and others are affected. 

CTO of Fast Company tweets on what this outage can look like.

Here’s what an aws outage looks like from within: notice the dip to zero, then how chaotic things are to the right.

Amazon Web Services outages are so common there is a possible pattern.  

Why we write about Google, traffic

Apple and Google are some of the top data center topics to write about.  Apple doesn't say a lot, but when they do, there is traffic all over the place.

Google is saying more than Apple with its photography and data center web site.

NewImage

So, why does the media write so much about Apple and Google.  Simple.  Traffic.

Here is my traffic over the last few days when I wrote about Google data center photography.

NewImage

This is one huge advantage Google has telling its data center story.  

Hit the 500+ connections on LinkedIn, decided to finally push

Some people religiously use LinkedIn.  I kind of use it when it is convenient and don't actually use the LinkedIn website more than every other week.  So, it's been a slow crawl to get up to 500+.  Yesterday I hit 499, and I decided to let LinkedIn crawl my e-mail to look for connections that I haven't connect with.  The list was 700+, and I whittled it down to 110 to connect with people who I know, but haven't' added them.  The 500th connection was a good friend who I have know for over 20 years and we both worked at Apple and Microsoft.

Here is a stream of the past 24 hours of connections that I decided to add.  I think this is most connections I have added in 24 hrs.  Thanks for accepting my connect requests.

NewImage

NewImage