Today’s data centers need to cut costs and reduce energy use while keeping their sensitive equipment cool, and choosing liquid cooling is an effective way to achieve these efficiencies.
The material used in insulation can have a significant influence on critical performance parameters in data centers, particularly in three critical areas: heat, humidity, and dust.
A National Center for Atmospheric Research case study
August 5, 2021
When the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) decided to build a new supercomputing center, it wanted to take advantage of the free cooling available by the high, dry Wyoming environment.
Collaboration will help RackBank reach its 100% clean energy and decarbonization data center goals
August 2, 2021
The refrigerant-free indirect evaporative methodology and its patented microporous membrane heat exchange process historically reduce water consumption in data centers by up to 90%.
The company will partner with Dell, Intel, Vertiv, and Mission Critical magazine
July 16, 2021
Throughout the month of August, GRC and its partners will provide educational sessions with end users, server manufacturers, and other data center stakeholders to discuss efficiency benefits and the reduction in CapEx and OpEx with liquid immersion cooling.
For most data centers, cooling used to be pretty straightforward: A CRAC unit kept the server room cold enough that staff often wear sweaters to work no matter the outside temperature.
Cooling experts consider the footprint of the data center’s building and property, the climate it’s in, and the IT load to design the system that best addresses the customer’s needs.