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Article

Analysis of Air-Side Economizers in Terms of Cooling-Energy Performance in a Data Center Considering Exhaust Air Recirculation

1
Department of Architecture, Graduated School, Kookmin University, 77 Jeongneung-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 02707, Korea
2
School of Architecture, Kookmin University, 77 Jeongneung-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 02707, Korea
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2018, 11(2), 444; https://doi.org/10.3390/en11020444
Submission received: 24 January 2018 / Revised: 12 February 2018 / Accepted: 13 February 2018 / Published: 17 February 2018
(This article belongs to the Section F: Electrical Engineering)

Abstract

:
Demand is soaring for data centers with advanced data-processing capabilities. In data centers with high-temperature information technology (IT) equipment, enormous cooling systems are operated year-round. To date, studies have aimed to improve the cooling efficiency of server-room units, but cooling-energy-consumption analysis considering the recirculation of exhaust air (EA) has not been researched to a sufficient degree. This study analyzed the cooling-energy saving effects considering the EA-recirculation and supply-air (SA)-temperature conditions when direct and indirect air-side economizers were applied to a data center in Korea. Thirteen case studies were conducted. The results showed that when the EA-recirculation ratio in the direct air-side economizer was 15%, its annual cooling-energy consumption increased by approximately 6.1% compared to the case with no recirculation. The indirect air-side economizer also exhibited an approximately 9% increase in cooling-energy consumption. On the other hand, when the SA temperature changed to 22 °C, the annual cooling-energy consumption of the direct and indirect air-side economizers decreased by approximately 67% and 55%, respectively, compared to a central chilled-water system. This indicates the importance of developing measures to prevent EA recirculation and of securing a wind path for the improvement of air-conditioning efficiency in data centers at the design stage.

1. Introduction

Demand is soaring for data centers with advanced data-processing capabilities, owing to the rapid advancement of the information technology (IT) industry [1,2]. The global IT-related market size in 2016 was reported as $153 billion [3]. IT equipment accounts for 40% of total data-center-operating costs [4].
In data centers with high-temperature IT equipment, enormous cooling systems are operated year-round to minimize the economic losses caused by malfunctions and errors of IT equipment [5]. Cooling-energy consumption accounts for approximately 31% of the total energy consumption in data centers [6]. Therefore, studies have been actively conducted on cooling systems that can improve heat-source efficiency by introducing air-side economizers to reduce the cooling energy consumed by data centers [7,8,9,10,11,12]. The air-side-economizer system can significantly reduce the cooling energy consumed by data centers. Representative air-side economizers applicable to data centers are divided into direct and indirect types, and the appropriate type must be selected at the design stage by considering the salt or dust contamination caused by regional characteristics [13].
A direct air-side economizer must effectively discharge the heated air that passes through a server rack to the outside, while the indirect air-side economizer must control the air flow through the installation of a separate wind path to prevent the recirculation of heated air. To date, many studies have been conducted on the improvement in cooling efficiency in the server-room unit, but analysis of cooling-energy consumption by considering the recirculation of exhaust air (EA) according to the shape of the data-center building has not been adequately researched. EA recirculation mixes part of the EA with outdoor air (OA) and causes a rise in temperature, thereby lowering the cooling-load-reduction effect in air-side economizers. This means that it is necessary to consider the effects of recirculating air discharged to the outside when the changes in cooling-energy consumption with the application of an air-side economizer are analyzed. When cooling-energy consumption is calculated by considering EA recirculation, a more accurate analysis of this quantity will be possible. In addition, in server racks located in the server rooms of a data center, “hot” and “cold” aisles are alternately arranged to efficiently supply the cold air discharged from the computer-room air conditioning (CRAC) or computer-room air handler (CRAH) to the server racks [14]. In general, large data centers are operated using underfloor distribution systems.
This means that the cooling-energy consumption of the same heat-source system can be reduced by improving the cooling efficiency, thus increasing the temperature of the supply air (SA) delivered to the server room. This study calculated the cooling-energy consumption of an existing data center using dynamic-energy simulation and analyzed the cooling-energy saving effect considering the various condition of EA recirculation and SA-temperature when direct and indirect air-side economizers are applied to a data center in Korea.

2. Cooling Load and Energy Consumption of a Conventional Data Center

2.1. Overview of Data Center

Table 1 shows an overview of a data center. This major data center located in Seoul, Korea, has four underground floors and 12 ground floors; the IT server rooms are located from the second to the 10th floors. In addition, the data center has chillers installed in the underground machine room and uses a central chilled-water system, which cools the IT equipment by producing chilled water and supplying it to the server rooms on each floor. The floor height is 4800 mm, and an underfloor distribution system is used for air distribution. In the air-distribution system, the air cooled by the CRAH cooling coil is supplied to the server racks through the cold aisles of the access floors and server rooms, and the heated air returns to CRAH through the hot aisles.

2.2. Boundary Condition of Energy Simulation

To calculate the cooling-energy consumption of the existing central chilled-water system in the data center, the cooling load of the server rooms must first be calculated. Table 2 shows the boundary conditions of the energy simulation. For the heat generated by IT servers, 6480 server racks were assumed to be installed, including 4 kW-class server-rack 720 units per floor. The converted value of server heat was 2880 kW per floor. The cooling load generated by resident personnel and lighting was considered. For load-pattern changes according to server operations, values ranging from 0.7 to 1.0 were applied for each hour. TRNSYS (17.2, Thermal Energy System Specialists, Madison, WI, USA) was used to quantitatively analyze the annual cooling-energy consumption of the data center (8760 h). The meteorological data for Seoul provided by TRNSYS were used as the OA conditions [15].

2.3. Devices Used in Central Chilled-Water Systems

2.3.1. Water-Cooled-Chiller Component

The components of the existing data-center cooling system and their specifications are listed in Table 3. The coefficient of performance (COP), which represents the performance index of a chiller, varies depending on the target inflow temperatures of the chilled and cooling water.
The COP value of the chillers used in this study was 6 based on the set chilled-water temperature of 7 °C and the cooling-water-inflow temperature of 30 °C [15]. The chiller COP is calculated using Equation (1) and capacity under current conditions is calculated using Equation (2):
COP = COP rated × COP ratio
Capacity = Capacity rated × Capacity ratio
The chiller load is calculated using Equation (3).
Q ˙ load = m ˙ chw × C p , chw × ( T chw , in T chw , set )
In addition, the part load ratio (PLR), which is the ratio between the load capacity and design capacity of the chillers, was investigated and reflected in the simulation analysis. PLR is calculated by Equation (4), while the outlet temperature of the chilled-water stream is given as Equation (5).
PLR = Q ˙ load Capacity
T chw , out = T chw , in Q ˙ met m ˙ chw × C p , chw

2.3.2. Cooling-Tower Component

The cooling tower is of a closed-circuit type. The cooling-water temperature difference (range) between the inlet and outlet of the cooling tower and the difference (approach) between the cooling-water-outlet and inlet-air wet-bulb temperatures was 5 °C. The fan power of the cooling tower was set to an operational rate of at least 80% to prevent freezing in winter. In addition, the heat source used as the cooling and chilled water had a specific heat of 4.19 kJ·kg−1·K−1. This cooling-tower model relied on the basic premise that the saturated-air temperature is the temperature at the air–water interface and that of the outlet fluid. With this assumption, the air enthalpy can be calculated from Equation (6) [16].
h sat ( T f , out ) = h a ( T a , in ) + Q ˙ f m ˙ a × ( 1 exp [ λ design m ˙ a m ˙ a , design ] ) y 1
Here, y = 0.6 for most applications, and the designed outlet-fluid-temperature, air- and fluid-flow-rate, and inlet-air conditions are required by the cooling-tower model as parameters. We can use Equation (7) to calculate the design conditions (hair(Tair,out,design)) as an unknown in order to solve for λdesign [17].
λ design = ln [ h sat ( T f , in , design ) h air ( T a , in , design ) h sat ( T f , out , design ) h air ( T a , out , design ) ]
The outlet-air enthalpy can be determined from the energy balance on the cooling tower and can be expressed as Equations (8) and (9).
Q fluid , design = m ˙ fluid × C p , fluid ( T fluid , in , design T fluid , out , design )
h air ( T air , out , design ) = h air ( T air , in , design + Q ˙ fluid , design m ˙ air )
The power of the cooling-tower fan is calculated using Equation (10).
P fan = P ˙ fan , rated a 0 + a 1 ( γ a ) + a 2 ( γ a ) 2 + a 3 ( γ a ) 3 +

2.3.3. Cooling-Coil Component

The central chilled-water system reduces the load on the chillers by bypassing the chilled-water flow into CRAH depending on the server-room heat. In this study, a simplified cooling coil was fitted as our model. The total heat-transfer rate across a chilled-water coil cooling a moist air stream is the difference in enthalpy across either flow stream, given as Equation (11).
Q ˙ t = m ˙ w × C p , w × ( T w , out T w , in )
A third empirical relation for the total heat transfer is taken from the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) and given as Equations (12)–(16) [18].
Q ˙ t = N row × A f × BRCW × WSF × LMTD
1 BRCW = C 1 × C 2 V a × C 3 V w × C 4 V w 2 × C 5 V a 3 × C 6 V w 2 V a 4
WSF = k 1 + k 2 Δ T 1 + k 3 Δ T 1 Δ T 2 + k 4 Δ T 1 2 + k 5 Δ T 1 Δ T 2 2 + k 6 Δ T 1 2 Δ T 2 + k 7 Δ T 1 Δ T 2 3 + k 8 Δ T 1 2 Δ T 2 3 + k 9 Δ T 1 3 Δ T 2 3
Δ T 1 = T dp , in T w , in
Δ T 2 = T db , in T w , in
where BRCW is the heat transfer per unit face area per log-mean-temperature difference for an entering water temperature equal to the dew-point temperature of the entering air stream, WSF is a wetted surface factor, and LMTD is the log mean temperature difference between air and water-flow streams. In this study, BRCW and WSF were calculated using the empirical constant values of previous research [18]. However, operating conditions of cooling coil should be considered to use this equation because this model was developed to fit in the condition of specific range in terms of face air velocities, chilled water velocities, entering chilled water temperature, and dry bulb temperature of entering and leaving air.
The velocities of the air and water streams are calculated using Equations (17) and (18).
V a = m ˙ a ρ a × A f
V w = 4 m ˙ a ρ w × π × d i 2 × N coil

2.3.4. Fan and Pump Components

All fans and pumps operate at constant speed with on/off signal control. Fans have a variable air-flow rate, and pumps have a constant water-flow rate. The fan and pump efficiencies were set to 65%. The power consumed by the fan and pump can be calculated as Equations (19) and (20), respectively [15].
P fan = P max c 0 + c 1 β + c 2 β 2 + c 3 β 3 + + c i β i ,   if   m ˙ > 0
P pump = P rated × η motor

2.4. Cooling Load and Energy Consumption

Figure 1 shows the cooling-load-calculation results. The cooling load generated in the server rooms of the data center ranged from 18,000 to 24,000 kW, depending on the operation rate of the server, independent of the OA. This was because approximately 98% of the cooling load was generated by the server racks, meaning that enormous cooling energy was consumed even when the ambient temperature was low in winter. The percentage of power consumed by each component out of the total annual power consumption of the central chilled-water system is shown in Figure 2. The chillers accounted for 47% of the total power consumption. Therefore, it is expected that the power consumption of the chillers will decrease just by improving the cooling efficiency of the server rooms because of increasing the set-chilled water and SA temperature.
Figure 3 shows the monthly cooling-energy consumption of the central chilled-water system. The monthly power consumption of the components excluding the cooling tower and chillers was constant. This is because only the temperature of the chilled water returning to the chillers through the bypass control changes. The flow rate of the pump or the air volume of CRAH are held constant, regardless of the server-room heat and OA conditions. In addition, the energy consumed by the chillers increased with the ambient temperature. This was because COP decreased because the temperature of the cooling water flowing into the chillers increased as the outdoor-air wet-bulb temperature rose. This means that the energy consumed to produce the same amount of 5°C chilled water increased. The energy consumed by the cooling tower also increased slightly in the summer when the outdoor-air wet-bulb temperature was relatively high.

3. Effect of Air-Side Economizers on Server Cooling in the Data Center

3.1. Case Study

Table 4 shows the 13 cases examined in this study. In Case 1, the central chilled-water system was applied to the target data center; this is our reference case, and the SA temperature was 13.5 °C. The air-side economizers were divided into direct and indirect types. The parameters affecting the cooling-energy performance of each air-side economizer were the set SA temperature and the EA recirculation ratio. The recirculation ratio was set to 5%, 10%, and 15% by taking advantage of the fact that the EA and OA grills of the data center are generally installed on the same side of the building.
Equation (21) is used to calculate T OA * , which was influenced by the recirculation of exhaust air.
T OA * = T OA × ( 1 r re , EA ) + T EA × r re , EA
Moreover, the SA temperatures were set, according to the improvement in cooling efficiency, as 18 °C and 22 °C.
When EA recirculation was 15% under the climate conditions of Seoul, the direct-air-side-economizer-availability time decreased from 52% to 47% per year. On the other hand, when the SA temperature condition was changed to 22 °C, it significantly increased from 52% to 78%, even for an EA recirculation of 15%.
In addition, when a direct air-side economizer is used, equipment malfunctions arising from dust from OA must be prevented. Standard 52 of ASHRAE uses the minimum-efficiency-reporting-value (MERV) index and recommends MERV 11 through MERV 13 to improve the indoor air quality of the server rooms when OA is introduced. It recommends the use of no less than MERV 8 filters [19]. Therefore, in this study, it was assumed that MERV-8 and MERV 11 filters were installed in the OA fans, and that energy simulation was performed by considering an increase in fan power due to pressure loss.

3.2. Direct Air-Side Economizer

Figure 4 shows a schematic of a cooling system using a direct air-side economizer. When the outdoor temperature is low, OA is directly supplied or mixed with the return air (RA) and supplied to the server rooms to produce a cooling effect. When the outdoor temperature is high, the existing central chilled-water system is operated.
In this study, the OA availability time was calculated by assuming that OA was introduced at 25% mixing-ratio intervals, according to the temperature or enthalpy section under the climatic conditions of Seoul (Figure 5). As a result, the OA-availability times of the temperature and enthalpy control were 6269 and 5556 h, respectively. In addition, 100% OA was set to be supplied to the server rooms under the condition that direct introduction of OA was possible.
Figure 6 shows the SA condition delivered to the server rooms via CRAH when OA was introduced into each section. In the 75% mixing-ratio section, the SA condition became a high-temperature and low-humidity state by OA and RA mixing. Thus, when the direct air-side economizer is operated, the control is simple when the mixing ratio is calculated by section, but there are areas where the SA condition that passes through the mixing chamber fails to meet the ASHRAE standard [20].

3.3. Indirect Air-Side Economizer

The system schematic and operation algorithm of the indirect air-side economizer is shown in Figure 7 and Figure 8, respectively. RA was first subjected to sensible heat exchange by adding an indirect heat exchanger to the existing central chilled-water system and was then supplied to the server rooms through cooling coils. The operation plan of the indirect air-side economizer was set to control three stages: one in which RA* (the RA state when it passes through the primary indirect-heat exchanger) was at or below 13.5 °C, one in which RA* was over 13.5 °C but below 22.5 °C, and one in which OA was 22.5 °C or higher. When OA is 22.5 °C or higher, it is difficult to expect the cooling effect of the indirect air-side economizer; hence, the central chilled-water system, i.e., the existing cooling system, is operated. When RA* is greater than 13.5 °C but less than 22.5 °C, a parallel-operation mode is activated in which the indirect air-side economizer is responsible for the partial load and the central chilled-water system is used for the remaining cooling load. When RA* is less than 13.5 °C, the cooling load of the server rooms is handled only by the indirect air-side economizer. The heat exchanger component model described by Equations (22) and (23) is used [21].
T RA * = T RA + ε HX ( m ˙ OA m ˙ RA ) × ( T OA T RA )
HX flow ratio = ( m ˙ OA + m ˙ RA ) / 2 m ˙ RA
In this study, the heat exchanger effectiveness was set at 70% based on the Energy Performance Index of the Korean government [22]. Here, as the heat exchanger effectiveness increases, the temperature passing through the heat exchanger becomes closer to the outside air, and it is possible to reduce the coil load and save the cooling energy.
In addition, when the indirect air-side economizer and central chilled-water system were operated in parallel, the parallel operation was stopped and only the central chilled-water system was operated if the cooling energy consumed was higher than that consumed by a single operation of the existing central chilled-water system. On the other hand, in the case of the indirect air-side economizer, MERV-8 filters were applied because OA was not directly introduced into the server rooms, and the power consumed by the OA fan was calculated by considering the corresponding pressure loss.

3.4. Cooling Energy Consumed by Air-Side Economizers

A case study on the change in cooling-energy consumption of the air-side economizer according to the EA-recirculation ratio and SA-temperature change was conducted. The results are shown in Table 5 and Figure 9. When the EA-recirculation ratio was 15%, the annual cooling-energy consumption was approximately 6.1% higher than that in Case 2 (recirculation ratio 0%). On the other hand, when the SA temperature was reduced to 22 °C when the direct air-side economizer was operated, the annual cooling-energy consumption was approximately 67% lower than that of the central chilled-water system. Therefore, it is expected that the improvement in cooling efficiency in the server rooms will significantly decrease the cooling-energy consumption of the data center.
In the indirect air-side economizer, at an outdoor temperature below 13.5 °C, an HX effectiveness of 70%, and a recirculation ratio of 0%, the amount of time spent processing the cooling load with only using OA was 3529 h per year. This increased to approximately 7000 h per year when parallel operation with the existing cooling system was included. In addition, the operation of the indirect air-side economizer was possible except for a certain period when the SA temperature was set to 22.5 °C. Thus, the annual cooling-energy consumption was reduced to approximately 45% compared to that of the existing central chilled-water system.
This result is similar to the annual cooling-energy saving ratio found by Ham et al. [21]. This previous study analyzed the cooling-energy consumption for various indirect air-side economizers.
As a result of the case study, it was confirmed that although the EA-recirculation ratio was adjusted to 15%, the increasing of cooling-energy consumption was not higher than EA-recirculation ratio.

4. Conclusions

The present study used dynamic energy simulation to analyze the cooling-energy saving effect considering EA-recirculation and SA-temperature conditions when direct and indirect air-side economizers were applied to a data center in Korea. The conclusions of this study are as follows:
  • When air-side economizers were used to reduce the cooling-energy consumption of the data center, the SA temperature exceeded the range recommended by ASHRAE when the mixing ratio was calculated by dividing the OA condition at regular intervals. Therefore, the mixing ratio of OA must be adjusted to meet the target SA condition according to the conditions of RA recirculation in the server rooms and of OA.
  • In the direct air-side economizer, when the EA-recirculation ratio was 15%, the annual cooling-energy consumption increased by approximately 6.1% compared to Case 2. In the indirect air-side economizer, the cooling-energy consumption increased by approximately 9%. This is because the use of OA was impossible owing to EA recirculation under climate conditions that would otherwise allow it. Therefore, EA grills must be installed such that the recirculation rate is lower than 5%, or the envelope plan must be implemented at the design stage of the data center.
  • When the SA-temperature condition was changed to 22 °C, the annual cooling-energy consumption of the direct and indirect air-side economizers was reduced by approximately 67% and 55%, respectively, compared to the case for the central chilled-water system. Therefore, it is expected that improving the cooling efficiency in server rooms will significantly reduce the cooling-energy consumption of data centers.
  • When the indirect air-side-economizer method is applied to data centers, server-rack malfunctions can be prevented because fine dust and moisture cannot be directly introduced into server rooms. In addition, it is expected that increment of SA set temperature and HX efficiency as well as EA-recirculation minimization will largely reduce the cooling-energy consumption of data centers, which accounts for enormous amounts of energy each year.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government (NRF-2015R1C1A1A01052784).

Author Contributions

Seonghyun Park provided main idea of the simulations, analyzed the simulation results and wrote the paper. Janghoo Seo reviewed the paper. All authors have read and approved the final manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Nomenclature

Afface area of a coil (m2)
ainormalized power coefficients
cicoefficient of a polynomial relating P/Pmax to m ˙ / m ˙ max (dimensionless)
BRCWbase rating of a coil (W·m−2·K−1)
C1~C6empirical constant
Capacitychiller capacity under current condition (W)
Capacityratedchiller rated capacity (W)
Capacityratiochiller capacity under current conditions divided by the rated capacity (dimensionless)
CMHcubic meters per hour (m3·h−1)
COPcoefficient of performance (dimensionless)
COPratedchiller rated coefficient of performance under current conditions (dimensionless)
COPratiochiller COP under current conditions divided by the rated COP (dimensionless)
Cpspecific heat (kJ·kg−1·K−1)
CRACcomputer-room air conditioning
CRAHcomputer-room air handler
ddiameter (mm)
EAexhaust air
Ectotal energy consumption of a central chilled-water system (W)
Eitotal energy consumption of an indirect-air-side economizer system (W)
hspecific enthalpy (J·kg−1)
h(T)heat-transfer coefficient between the fluid and air at a given temperature T (W·m−2·K−1)
HXheat exchanger
ITinformation technology
k1~k9empirical constant
LMTDlog-mean temperature difference between air and water flow (°C)
m ˙ mass-flow rate (kg·h−1)
Ncoilnumber of parallel water-flow circuits
Nrowdepth measured in number of rows of coil tubes
OAoutdoor air
Ppower consumption (W)
PLRchiller-part load ratio (dimensionless)
Q ˙ heat-transfer rate (W)
Q ˙ met load met by chiller (W)
RAreturn air
rreratio of recirculation
SAsupply air
Ttemperature (°C)
Vvelocity (m·s−1)
WSFwetted-surface factor (dimensionless)

Greek Symbols

βcontrol function (0 ≤ β ≤ 1)
γratio of flow rate to designed flow rate
εeffectiveness
ηefficiency of pump motor
λthermal conductivity (W·m−1·K−1)
ρdensity (kg m−3)
Subscripts
aair
chwchilled water
cwcooling water
dbdry bulb temperature
designdesign condition
dpdew point temperature
ffluid
HXheat exchanger
iinside of tube
ininlet
maxmaximum
outoutlet
Rrated
satsaturated-air condition
setset point
ttotal
wwater

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Figure 1. Monthly cooling load of server room.
Figure 1. Monthly cooling load of server room.
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Figure 2. Percentage of power consumption of each component.
Figure 2. Percentage of power consumption of each component.
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Figure 3. Monthly cooling energy consumption of central chilled-water system.
Figure 3. Monthly cooling energy consumption of central chilled-water system.
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Figure 4. Direct air-side economizer schematic.
Figure 4. Direct air-side economizer schematic.
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Figure 5. Annual outdoor air condition and outdoor air (OA) mixing ratio. (A) Temperature control; (B) Enthalpy control.
Figure 5. Annual outdoor air condition and outdoor air (OA) mixing ratio. (A) Temperature control; (B) Enthalpy control.
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Figure 6. SA condition according to the OA mixing ratio. (A) Temperature control; (B) Enthalpy control.
Figure 6. SA condition according to the OA mixing ratio. (A) Temperature control; (B) Enthalpy control.
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Figure 7. Indirect air-side economizer schematic.
Figure 7. Indirect air-side economizer schematic.
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Figure 8. Indirect air-side economizer operation algorithm.
Figure 8. Indirect air-side economizer operation algorithm.
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Figure 9. Annual cooling energy consumption of each case.
Figure 9. Annual cooling energy consumption of each case.
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Table 1. Overview of data center.
Table 1. Overview of data center.
ClassificationParameterValueUnit
DatacenterLocationSeoul, Korea-
Latitude37.523N
Longitude126.871E
Gross floor area64,700m−2
CRAC capacity30RT
Server roomFloor height4800mm
Ceiling height1200mm
Access floor height600mm
SA condition13.5, 50°C, %
Energies 11 00444 i001 Energies 11 00444 i002 Energies 11 00444 i003
Panorama of data centerCeiling grill of hot aisles sideAirflow diagram in the server room
Table 2. Boundary condition for calculating cooling load.
Table 2. Boundary condition for calculating cooling load.
ClassificationDescription
IT equipment heat loadConverted value of server heat 2880 kW × 9 (floor)
People loadPersonnel/daily schedule of 20 residing personnel
Weather dataSeoul, Korea (obtained from TRNSYS)
Lighting load16 Wm−2 × 2250 m−2 (floor area)
Server operationTime00–08 h09–20 h20–24 h
Server rack load ratio0.71.00.8
Energies 11 00444 i004
Applied for each hour (0.7–1.0)
Table 3. Specifications of central chilled-water system.
Table 3. Specifications of central chilled-water system.
ComponentSpecificationsUnitPower Consumption
Chiller Q ˙ R = 4567 kW, COP = 68765 kW
Cooling towerForced draft Cooling tower, Q ˙ R = 6345 kW8120 kW
Chilled water pump m ˙ chw = 56,400 kg·h−1, Cp,chw = 4.19 kJ·kg−1·K−18110 kW
Cooling water pump m ˙ cw = 93,600 kg·h−1, Cp,chw = 4.19 kJ·kg−1·K−18160 kW
Outdoor air supply fan26,450 CMH64811 kW
CRAHCooling coilNumber of rows = 5, Number of tubes = 60
Tube outer diameter 12 mm; inner diameter 11 mm
3247.5 kW
Capacity22,800 CMH3247.5 kW
Table 4. Condition of case.
Table 4. Condition of case.
CaseCooling SystemSA Set TemperatureEA Recirculation Rate
Case 1Central chilled cooling system13.5 °C-
Case 2With direct air-side economizer0%
Case 35%
Case 410%
Case 515%
Case 618 °C0%
Case 722 °C
Case 8With indirect air-side economizer13.5 °C0%
Case 95%
Case 1010%
Case 1115%
Case 1218 °C0%
Case 1322 °C
Table 5. Results of case study.
Table 5. Results of case study.
Case1234567
Operation systemExisting
system
Direct air-side economizer
SA condition13.5 °C18 °C22 °C
HX effectiveness-Mixing chamber (Perfect mixing)
EA recirculation ratio-0%5%10%15%0%
Available time of outdoor air (h)-453644134289416956656838
Annual energy consumption (MWh)69,12138,81539,53840,37441,16431,20622,642
Energy saving ratio-43.8%42.8%41.6%40.4%54.9%67.2%
Case8910111213
Operation systemIndirect air-side economizer
SA condition13.5 °C18°C22 °C
HX effectivenessHeat exchanger effectiveness 70%
EA recirculation ratio0%5%10%15%0%
Available time of outdoor air (h)698867486594631282068707
Annual energy consumption (MWh)46,82048,23049,10550,91139,81230,913
Energy saving ratio32.3%30.2%29.0%26.3%44.1%55.3%

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MDPI and ACS Style

Park, S.; Seo, J. Analysis of Air-Side Economizers in Terms of Cooling-Energy Performance in a Data Center Considering Exhaust Air Recirculation. Energies 2018, 11, 444. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11020444

AMA Style

Park S, Seo J. Analysis of Air-Side Economizers in Terms of Cooling-Energy Performance in a Data Center Considering Exhaust Air Recirculation. Energies. 2018; 11(2):444. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11020444

Chicago/Turabian Style

Park, Seonghyun, and Janghoo Seo. 2018. "Analysis of Air-Side Economizers in Terms of Cooling-Energy Performance in a Data Center Considering Exhaust Air Recirculation" Energies 11, no. 2: 444. https://doi.org/10.3390/en11020444

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