The most common server racks in data centers are front-to-rear racks, which draw in the cooling air from the front side and discharge it from the backside. In a raised-floor data center the cooling air to these racks is provided by perforated tiles that are placed in front of them. In a high-density data center, these tiles discharge a considerable amount of airflow, which leads to a high-velocity vertical jet in front of the rack. Such a high-velocity jet may bypass the servers located at the bottom of the rack leading to their airflow starvation and potential failure. In this paper the effect of the high-velocity jet on the airflow taken by servers at various heights in the rack is studied. A computer model based on the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) technique is used to predict the airflow distribution through servers stacked in the rack. Two cases are considered. In one case, the rack is placed in the middle of a row of racks in a prefect hot aisle-cold aisle arrangement. The boundary conditions around such a rack is symmetrical. In the other case, the rack is placed in a room with asymmetrical boundary conditions. The characteristics of the servers in the rack are taken from typical 1U and 2U servers manufactured by IBM. It is shown that in general the high-velocity jet has a mild effect on the airflow taken by the servers, and the airflow reduction is limited to servers at the bottom of the rack. Racks in a symmetrical configuration are more susceptible to the airflow starvation. In the most critical conditions, an airflow reduction of 15% is calculated for the server located at the bottom of the rack. Using the result obtained from the computational analysis, a simple model is developed to predict the reduction of the cooling air under the most critical situation for the server placed at the bottom of the rack.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME 2007 InterPACK Conference collocated with the ASME/JSME 2007 Thermal Engineering Heat Transfer Summer Conference
July 8–12, 2007
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Conference Sponsors:
- Electronic and Photonic Packaging Division
ISBN:
0-7918-4277-0
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Analysis of Airflow Distribution Across a Front-to-Rear Server Rack
Amir Radmehr,
Amir Radmehr
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Search for other works by this author on:
Kailash C. Karki,
Kailash C. Karki
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Search for other works by this author on:
Suhas V. Patankar
Suhas V. Patankar
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Search for other works by this author on:
Amir Radmehr
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Kailash C. Karki
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Suhas V. Patankar
Innovative Research, Inc., Plymouth, MN
Paper No:
IPACK2007-33574, pp. 837-843; 7 pages
Published Online:
January 8, 2010
Citation
Radmehr, A, Karki, KC, & Patankar, SV. "Analysis of Airflow Distribution Across a Front-to-Rear Server Rack." Proceedings of the ASME 2007 InterPACK Conference collocated with the ASME/JSME 2007 Thermal Engineering Heat Transfer Summer Conference. ASME 2007 InterPACK Conference, Volume 1. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. July 8–12, 2007. pp. 837-843. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/IPACK2007-33574
Download citation file:
22
Views
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
Airflow and Cooling in a Data Center
J. Heat Transfer (July,2010)
Experimental and Numerical Analysis of Data Center Pressure and Flow Fields Induced by Backward and Forward CRAH Technology
J. Electron. Packag (September,2022)
Related Chapters
On the Average Diameter of Directed Double-Loop Networks
International Conference on Instrumentation, Measurement, Circuits and Systems (ICIMCS 2011)
The Localized Collocation Meshless Method (LCMM) Framework
Introduction to Finite Element, Boundary Element, and Meshless Methods: With Applications to Heat Transfer and Fluid Flow
System Thermal Analysis-Rack (Part II)
Thermal Management of Telecommunication Equipment, Second Edition