Verification of container data center using 380 V dc power distribution system

Author(s):  
Masato Kaga ◽  
Masatoshi Noritake ◽  
Keiichi Hirose ◽  
Masato Mino
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (16) ◽  
pp. 3378-3382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Yu ◽  
Daozhuo Jiang ◽  
Yiqiao Liang ◽  
Jietao Chen

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Teng ◽  
Yuejiao Wang ◽  
Shumin Sun ◽  
Yan Cheng ◽  
Peng Yu ◽  
...  

DC power distribution systems will play an important role in the future urban power distribution system, while the charging and discharging requirements of electric vehicles have a great impact on the voltage stability of the DC power distribution systems. A robust control method based on H∞ loop shaping method is proposed to suppress the effect of uncertain integration on voltage stability of DC distribution system. The results of frequency domain analysis and time domain simulation show that the proposed robust controller can effectively suppress the DC bus voltage oscillation caused by the uncertain integration of electric vehicle, and the robustness is strong.


Author(s):  
Aaron P. Wemhoff ◽  
Faisal Ahmed

Abstract Physics-based modeling aids in designing efficient data center power and cooling systems. These systems have traditionally been modeled independently under the assumption that the inherent coupling of effects between the systems has negligible impact. This study tests the assumption through uncertainty quantification of models for a typical 300 kW data center supplied through either an AC-based or DC-based power distribution system. A novel calculation scheme is introduced that couples the calculations of these two systems to estimate the resultant impact on predicted Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE), Computer Room Air Conditioning (CRAC) return temperature, total system power requirement, and system power loss values. A two-sample z-test for comparing means is used to test for statistical significance with 95% confidence. The power distribution component efficiencies are calibrated to available published and experimental data. The predictions for a typical data center with an AC-based system suggest that the coupling of system calculations results in statistically significant differences for the cooling system PUE, the overall PUE, the CRAC return air temperature, and total electrical losses. However, none of the tested metrics are statistically significant for a DC-based system. The predictions also suggest that a DC-based system provides statistically significant lower overall PUE and electrical losses compared to the AC-based system, but only when coupled calculations are used. These results indicate that the coupled calculations impact predicted general energy efficiency metrics and enable statistically significant conclusions when comparing different data center cooling and power distribution strategies.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document