rules of the
y savings
n in the years
ainstream in
re. In spite of the
rding to which the
rket in data centres
r a CAGR of over
st period (2020–
s fully convinced
can represent a
r (among others)
mersion Cooling
sing support for its
e present and the
on data centres.
hat, Moore’s
ch the number
e integrated
very two years) is
slowing down and that, sooner or later,
we will get to its inevitable demise. Alex
Carrol, Managing Member at Lifeline Data
Centers, said: “When the average per
rack power density is greater than 7 kW
per rack, the space utilisation goes down
to almost 50%. This is because almost
50% of the space is then needed by
power and cooling equipment alone and
only 50% of the space can be utilised by
the actual IT equipment.”
All these observations make a case for
Immersion Cooling as the most efficient
clean tech guaranteeing unprecedented
IT hardware densities compared to air
cooling (Submer’s solution allows to
achieve >100kW per rack footprint while
saving 99% of cooling costs).
We are nearing the second half of 2020
and we have seen more and more cases
that would confirm this tendency (from
Google to Facebook).
Nevertheless, there is still a certain
resistance by some of the most traditional
companies in accepting a technology
www.intelligentdatacentres.com