Boiling liquid can cool the datacenter servers: Microsoft
Microsoft always brings newer innovations to the technology, now the software giant trying to reinvent on how the server performance to get enhanced. It hopes that its boiling liquid technology will have the same effects. If so, we could see a revolution in the data center world where servers are smaller, and much more reliable. Plus with this new cooling system.
Boiling Liquid promises to be better in every way compared to air cooling. Microsoft's says it is developing a new cooling technology , which is needed, because of the rising demands of power and heat from computer components, which are only going to get worse.
The software giant says by redefining the Moore's Law, which is to blame for this; transistors on computer chips have become so small that they've hit the atomic level. Soon you won't be able to shrink the transistors on a new process node any smaller as it will be physically impossible to do so.
To counter this, chip fabs have had to increase power consumption quite significantly to keep increasing CPU performance -- namely from adding more and more cores to a CPU. As the CPUs have increased from 150 watts to more than 300 watts per chip, and GPUs have increased to more than 700 watts per chip on average.
The server components get more and more power-hungry, Microsoft believes this new liquid solution will be necessary to keep costs down on server infrastructure. Where in the case of consumer desktops the CPUs and graphics cards tend to have less power consumption than that.
With this the Microsoft's data center servers could be getting a massive thermal management upgrade in the near future. Right now, the software giant is testing a radical new cooling technology known as boiling liquid, which promises to be higher performance, more reliable, and cheaper to maintain compared to traditional air cooling systems in data centers right now.
Servers that are equipped with this new prototype cooling system look very similar to mineral oil PCs if you've seen one. Dozens of server blades are packed tightly together in a fully submerged tank of boiling liquid. The liquid of course is non-conductive so the servers can operate safely inside the liquid environment.
The liquid is a special unknown recipe that boils at 122 degrees Fahrenheit (which is 90 degrees lower than the boiling point of water). The low boiling point is needed to drive heat away from critical components. Once the liquid begins boiling, it'll automatically roll up to the surface, allowing cooled condensers to contact the liquid, returning the cooling liquid to its fully liquidized state.
Effectively, this system is one gigantic vapor chamber. Both cooling systems rely on chemical reactions to bring heat from system components to cooling chambers, whether that be heatsinks or, in this case, a condenser.
A few years ago Microsoft unleashed Project Natick, which was a massive operation to bring datacenters underwater to inherit the benefits of using seawater as a cooling system.
To do this, the server chambers were filled with dry nitrogen air instead of oxygen and use cooling fans, a heat exchanger, and a specialized plumbing system that pipes in seawater through the cooling system.
What Microsoft learned was the sheer reliability of water/liquid cooling. The servers on the seafloor experienced one-eighth the failure rate of replica servers on land with traditional air cooling.
See What’s Next in Tech With the Fast Forward Newsletter
Tweets From @varindiamag
Nothing to see here - yet
When they Tweet, their Tweets will show up here.