Notes from the Consultant’s Jungle

Entries categorized as ‘Data Center’

How Cold Should My Cold Aisles Be?

April 16, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I was recently asked a question about how cool the cold aisle should be in a data center using hot/cold aisles to manage temperature.

This question is difficult to answer without other background information.  I’ve seen specifications reference ASHRAE guidelines, Uptime Institute recommendations, and so on.  For me, TIA-942 (which is the basis for the international standard on data center design), is a good framework to lean upon.

TIA-942, Appendix G states the following for the capabilities of the raised floor area environmental air:

  • 20 degrees C to 25 degrees C (68F to 77F)
    • Normal set point: 22 degrees C (72F)  +/- 1 degree C (2F)
  • Relative Humidity: 40% to 55%
    • Normal set point: 45% RH +/- 5%

Now, all that may be easier said than done, of course.  The whole point of the cooling is to keep the equipment happy (operating in the prescribed temperature range).  Heat is generated by the equipment’s consumption of electricity, the level of utilization, and the density of the technology used in your data center (which may also vary by location on the raised floor, creating a non-uniform temperature pattern). 

This is also modulated by the power density capabilities of the data center’s MEP infrastructure.  If you have a relatively old facility, chances are that the power density capabilities of the facility are less than 50 Watts per Square Foot (W/SF).  If you have a modern facility, you may enjoy capacities of 85 W/SF, 100 W/SF, or even 150 W/SF (higher than that are somewhat rare these days).  A well designed MEP infrastructure has cooling capacity matched to power density capacity. 

Regardless of that though, it’s possible that you may use technologies that squeeze a very high amount of power consumption (and heat generation) into a small area.  Hot/Cold aisle arrangements may not be enough to cool those spots, and may cause consideration of supplemental cooling on the raised floor.  There are several in-row cooling technologies with which you can place a floor-standing cooling unit in-row with your equipment racks to deliver extra cooling capacity to selected areas.  One should be careful when using supplemental approaches though, that the redundancy of MEP infrastructure supporting your intended Tier Level is not obviated by such an implementation.

Do you have any experiences with specifying hot/cold aisle metrics that you’d like to share?

 

 

Categories: Data Center · IS Security
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New Data Center Tier Classification Guidelines from the Uptime Institute

April 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

data-center-blueprint.jpgThe Uptime Institute recently released an update to its white paper defining the Tier levels for data centers.   If you’re interested in looking at it, it can be found here.  This update from the Institute is a welcomed release indeed. 

In our recent experience with Clients planning, renovating, and building data centers, the earlier release of this document (over one year ago) grew to be a reference of “requirements,” “ standards,” “ best practices,” and “mandates” for leaders charged with charting the IT facility strategy and selling/supporting the ROI basis for that strategy.  The reason I put the terms above in quotes is that a fair amount of abstraction and indirect dot-connecting is done which sometimes uses the Institute’s performance guidelines in vain.

Now with that said, I’m not suggesting that the new release of the document will prevent further abstractions of the Institute’s guidelines.  In fact, the bulk of the new release is very much a rearrangement of the Institute’s earlier text.   The rearrangements and new additions however, represent a clarification and stronger position statement of the features required to achieve a given Tier rating, and a stronger articulation of the rationale behind creating the Tiers in the first place.  This is important, as it should help to avoid some of the temptations by the reader to abstract, as mentioned above… including the temptation to define facilities in terms of “Tier 2.5,” “strong Tier 3,” and so on. 

One of my favorite changes in this new release is the move away from specifying power density in terms of watts-per-square foot.   Instead, this release of the Institute’s document takes the approach of kilowatts-per-cabinet.  This is much more relevant to the way we’re planning data center space today, and reflective of the needs of higher density data processing equipment (i.e., blades), and of popular dual/quad processor demands. 

Categories: Business · Data Center
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My Kingdom for a Nice (big) Raised Floor!

March 22, 2008 · Leave a Comment

citizens_and_kings_03_300.jpg

‘Ever notice how difficult it is to find good data center space today?  It wasn’t all that long ago that I recall walking through (seemingly) acres of raised floor in mostly vacant hosting centers, being courted by the local sales team to place my infrastructure in their space. 

What a difference a few years makes.  Today, it’s a Seller’s market when it comes to raised floor space.  The market is especially tight if you’re looking for larger amounts of contiguous space.  If you’re looking to plant, say 10,000 or 20,000 square feet of racks at a collocation provider today,…. Fa-get-a-bah-dit (well, almost).

 

 

 

 

 

 

There’s an additional complication though.  Besides looking for a quantity of IT space, enterprises today are also interested in Tier-3 or higher space.  Hosting customers want the extra “9” in the availability number, and so to their Customers.  If a higher Tier rating is required in your search, the pool of candidates is likely limited to those facilities constructed over the past few years.

 

 

 

Let’s not forget too, the cost component that I sometimes call “The Infrastructure Tax.”  Hosting providers have had to find a way to pass on the (steeply) rising cost of power and cooling to their customers.  In Atlanta where my office is located, power is still relatively cheap, but in other parts of the world where we serve our Clients, the cost of power and the margins applied by the hosting provider can be quite hefty.  In some cases, the all-in expense of using a collocation provider can compete with a build/own approach from a 5-year ROI perspective.

 

 

If you’d care to share your recent experience with finding high-Tier collocation space in your part of the world I’d be delighted to hear about it.

 

Categories: Data Center
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