IBM is turning to water cooling for its new server range and is claiming a 40
per cent reduction in power costs.
The new Power
575 supercomputer uses water-cooled copper baffles to keep the heat from the
448 processor cores. The method is so efficient that 80 per cent fewer cooling
modules are needed and this translates into a 40 per cent cost saving on power.
"The new water cooling enables us to scale up our performance, while staying
within the given energy envelope in our environment," said
Dr. Hermann Lederer,
head of Application Support at Garching Computing Center (RZG) at the Max Planck
Institute for Plasma Physics in Garching, Germany.
"The new computer will enable Max Planck researchers to tackle new
challenging scientific problems and solve single compute tasks five to 20 times
faster than is possible on the current system, which was Germany's fastest
supercomputer in 2002."
The system, dubbed 'Hydro-Cluster', lets IBM pack components in much more
densely than before. A single rack of the new computer has 14 2U nodes, each
with 32, 4.7-GHz cores of POWER6 processors supported by 3.5TB of memory.
IBM boffins are now working on even more power efficient ideas, such as
running cooling water inside the chips themselves. The company is working
towards a plan for carbon neutral data centres, where cooling water is used to
heat the building itself or nearby homes.
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