2020
DOI: 10.1007/s10973-020-09499-w
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Energy-saving potential of separated two-phase thermosiphon loops for data center cooling

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Cited by 13 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In the modern information and digital era, while we enjoy the convenience brought by big data analysis, cloud services, high-performance parallel computing and artificial intelligence, we need to address the related increase in energy consumption and comply with stricter thermal management requirements of data centres (Dang, Jia & Lu 2017). Data centres consume up to 416 billion kWh of electricity each year, which accounts for almost 2.0 % of the global electricity, and thus represent a significant proportion of global power consumption (Sulaiman, Daraghmeh & Wang 2020;Ding et al 2022). Surprisingly, up to 40 % of the electricity is used for mechanical-vapor-compression cooling systems for the data hosts (Dayarathna, Wen & Fan 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the modern information and digital era, while we enjoy the convenience brought by big data analysis, cloud services, high-performance parallel computing and artificial intelligence, we need to address the related increase in energy consumption and comply with stricter thermal management requirements of data centres (Dang, Jia & Lu 2017). Data centres consume up to 416 billion kWh of electricity each year, which accounts for almost 2.0 % of the global electricity, and thus represent a significant proportion of global power consumption (Sulaiman, Daraghmeh & Wang 2020;Ding et al 2022). Surprisingly, up to 40 % of the electricity is used for mechanical-vapor-compression cooling systems for the data hosts (Dayarathna, Wen & Fan 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This process may be through natural convection (passive mode) or driven by an electric pump (active mode). However, due to reliability, robustness, and power‐free operation, passive techniques have gained immense popularity in nuclear, solar, and electronic industries 2–6 . Among different techniques, natural circulation loops (NCLs) and thermosyphons have been extensively studied due to their simple construction and high heat removal capacity over long distances 2 …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, due to reliability, robustness, and power-free operation, passive techniques have gained immense popularity in nuclear, solar, and electronic industries. [2][3][4][5][6] Among different techniques, natural circulation loops (NCLs) and thermosyphons have been extensively studied due to their simple construction and high heat removal capacity over long distances. 2 In hindsight, thermosyphon translates to a heat pipe.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Datacenter thermal management is a branch of electronic cooling which has been receiving considerable attention lately. Thermal management systems have been estimated to account for 30 to 50% (Kheirabadi and Groulx, 2016;Khalaj and Halgamuge, 2017;Sulaiman et al, 2020) of all electricity consumption in data centers, resulting in high operational costs and contributing to a high overall carbon footprint for this facility.…”
Section: Introduction Data Center and Electronic Coolingmentioning
confidence: 99%