Innovative approaches for deep decarbonization of data centers and building space heating networks: Modeling and comparison of novel waste heat recovery systems for liquid cooling systems
Non-heat pump data center waste heat recovery for space heating is studied.
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Two schemesrecovering from both sides of cooling distribution unitare compared.
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The two schemes achieve payback in under a year due to the elimination of heat pump.
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Waste heat recovery on the secondary side outperforms that on the primary side.
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Novel relationship graphs facilitate data center waste heat recovery system design.
Abstract
The data usage surge drives greater data center demandamplifying global CO2 emissions. Mitigating climate change necessitates reducing data center CO2 emissions. Reusing waste heat from data centers offers a potential energy efficiency boost and environmental impact reduction. This study utilizes liquid cooling technology to raise waste heat temperature for building space heating and introduces the concept of ‘data furnaces,’ where data centers directly supply waste heat to heat buildings on-sitereducing district heating consumption and lowering CO2 emissions. Efficiently designing a heat recovery heat exchanger system that accounts for both heat rejection and cooling sides of a liquid cooling system is crucial for achieving complete heat recovery without using heat pumpa commonly overlooked aspect in existing literature. To address this issuewe propose two heat exchanger schemes: connecting the building space heating network to the secondary side (Scheme 1) and the primary side (Scheme 2) of the cooling distribution unit. Implementing these innovations leads to the elimination of dependence on a heat pumpsubstantially cutting energy and CO2 emissions. Using TRNSYS softwarewe developmodeland compare waste heat recovery schemes to curb district heating consumption and CO2 emissions. To demonstrate broad implications of the proposed approaches for energy efficiency and sustainability in the data centers and building space heating networksa showcase study examines constant 25 kW waste heat from a direct-to-chip liquid-cooled rack in an office building with 285.7 MWh annual space heating demand. A novel waste heat recovery rate relationship graph is created to assist system designuncovering an unexpected result in Scheme 2: waste heat recovery decreases as outdoor temperature falls. In contrastScheme 1 maintains a stable waste heat recovery rate around 25 kWregardless of outdoor temperature fluctuations. As a resultScheme 1 reuses 155.2 MWh of waste heat annually compared to 138 MWh for Scheme 2. Schemes 1 and 2 yield annual electricity savings of 2290.5 kWh and 905.2 kWhrespectivelyfor the cooling system. Both schemes achieve profitability within a year through a 25-year life cycle analysis (LCC) and substantially reduce CO2 emissionswith Scheme 1 saving 291,996 kgCO2 and Scheme 2 saving 258,192 kgCO2. The study addresses critical gaps in existing literature by emphasizes LCC. The proposed heat exchanger designs represent pioneering solutions for optimizing waste heat recoveryparticularly in challenging climates. New findings offer substantial benefits to both liquid-cooled and air-cooled facilitiesmaking significant contributions to achieve carbon neutrality in data center operations.