Networks Europe Sept-Oct 2016 | Page 26

26 CFD Marrying CFD with real-time monitoring By Dave Wolfenden, MD, Heatload www.heatload.co.uk The rise of computational fluid dynamics has dramatically improved efficiency by modelling airflow to optimise cooling Power and cooling is for many data centre owners, their biggest operational expenditure cost. It’s not just the physical cost of the energy that impacts Opex it’s the increasing cost of emission taxes that are being applied to data centres. To help improve efficiency, data centre owners have turned to computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to model airflow in order to optimise cooling. While the science behind CFD makes it ideal for modelling data centres, it can quickly become outdated as workloads change. To solve this problem models must be verified and use real-time data to stay valid. CFD is used in a wide variety of industries to understand fluid flows. Complex algorithms and analysis show how a fluid, in this case air, moves. This has made it important to industries such as aerospace and automotive as they look to improve aerodynamics. Racing teams at major motor races use CFD to see how effective the new parts are on a car in the early practice sessions. While those same parts will have already been modelled and tested in a wind tunnel, the realtime race data is used to tune the models. On its own, CFD is not enough. It’s akin to creating a new aerodynamic part for a motor racing team then bolting it to the car hoping that it will deliver a race winning performance. While it may deliver some benefits, they will be www.networkseuropemagazine.com