The present application claims priority from Japanese application JP2010-268211 filed on Dec. 1, 2010, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this application.
This invention relates to an electronic apparatus rack, and more particularly to an improvement in cooling performance in an electronic apparatus rack incorporating therein one or more servers wherein the temperature distribution of the exhaust air from one or more servers is uneven to a considerable extent.
Heat generation in such a semiconductor device as a central processing unit (CPU) incorporated in an electronic apparatus like a personal computer or a server, tends to increase due to the ongoing reduction in size of the semiconductor device and the ongoing large-scale integration. Accordingly, there is an increasing demand for enhancing the capacity of an air conditioner used for a rack on which servers are mounted or a data center which administers racks as a whole.
In order to meet such a requirement, a system has recently been proposed in, for example, JP-A-2010-041007 (corresponding to US 2010/0033931) (patent document No. 1), in which a heat exchanger (radiator) is provided in the door attached to the exhaust side of the rack, and heat of exhaust air in the room for the system is dissipated into the ambient air outside the room by causing refrigerant to flow through the radiator.
This system having the radiator situated immediately on the downstream side of the server rack, has an advantage that heat exchange takes place before exhaust heat diffuses in the room so that effective cooling can be attained.
In
In
Through this heat exchange system described above, absorbed heat is transferred through the refrigerant pipe 201 to the coupled outdoor heat exchanger, which in turn dissipates the transferred heat into the ambient air.
However, this system has two problems discussed below.
The two problems will now be discussed with reference to
One of the problems is that since the radiator is situated very near to the exhaust side of the server, high-temperature exhaust air directly hits the radiator so that local degradation of heat exchange occurs.
The server 301 mounted on the electronic apparatus rack 101 is consuming electric power nearly equal to the maximum tolerable heat amount Qmax of the rear door according to a program for handling a heavy load. Consequently, the temperature distribution curve for the exhaust air represented by a dashed curve 302 bulges sideways (in the direction of wind), indicating that the temperature of exhaust air is unusually high on and near the exhaust side of the server.
Let the space occupied by the rack be divided into upper area, middle area and lower area, and let them be named Qu, Qm, and Ql, respectively, as shown in
The amount Q of heat transfer or exchanged heat is generally given by the following expression.
Q=(T2−T1)×h×A,
where T1 denotes the temperature of fins, T2 the temperature on the intake side of the door (on the immediately windward side of the radiator), h the coefficient of heat transfer, and A the total surface area of all the fins.
The total surface area A is determined depending on the physical dimensions of the radiator and therefore is a constant. The heat transfer coefficient h is determined depending on the rate of air flow or the sort of fluid flowing among the fins. The temperature T2, which is a state quantity, is determined uniquely depending on the amount of heat generated by the server and the amount of wind (i.e. air flow). Heat concentration, which should be avoided if possible, can be rephrased as an increase in the value of T2.
On the other hand, the fin temperature T1 can be kept constant if the temperature of refrigerant is kept constant and if a sufficient amount of refrigerant is available. But it does not mean that the amount of refrigerant increases in accordance with the generated heat concentration. It does mean that an increase in the amount of refrigerant may generally cause an increase in flow resistance of refrigerant in proportion to the square law of amount of refrigerant.
Consequently, if heat concentration occurs in an area, even the maximum cooling capacity available in the area cannot sufficiently dissipate heat concentrating in the area. As a result, air of abnormally higher temperature is exhausted from the area which is otherwise cooled to a predetermined temperature, and therefore cooling performance becomes lower though the tolerable amount of heat generation is strictly observed.
Further, the second problem mentioned above is that the uneven temperature distribution described above will make it difficult to measure cooling performance with high precision. As shown in
However, if such a local heat concentration as described above occurs, the detected values of the intake-side temperature sensors do not properly contribute to the average temperature of the intake air (in fact, as in the case shown in
This measure, however, is problematic in terms of cost and maintenance and also unrealistic.
The object of this invention, which has been made to solve such problems incidental to the prior art counterparts as described above, is to provide an electronic apparatus rack which can prevent the degradation of cooling performance due to local heat concentration on the exhaust side of the server mounted on the rack.
The aforementioned and further objects and features of this invention will become apparent when one reads the following description of this specification in conjunction with the attached drawings.
Typical examples of this invention disclosed herein will be enumerated as follows.
A first example is an electronic apparatus rack having a rear door, the rear door comprising a radiator incorporated in the rear door; plural fans installed on the exhaust side of the radiator; and plural heat pipes installed on the intake side of the radiator.
A second example is an electronic apparatus rack having a rear door and a front door, comprising plural fans mounted on the rear door side of the electronic apparatus rack; and plural heat pipes mounted on the front door side of the electronic apparatus rack.
A typical advantage obtained by the typical examples of this invention described above will be explained as follows.
The typical advantage is that the temperature distribution of the radiator intake air can be uniform. Accordingly, cooling operation can be prevented from exceeding its limiting threshold due to uneven temperature distribution so that a desired, stable cooling operation can be secured.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of the embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Modes of practice according to this invention will be described in detail below in reference to the attached drawings. Throughout all the sheets of drawings, equivalent parts or members are labeled with the same reference numerals, and the description of the parts or members once described will not be repeated.
With reference to
As shown in
On the windward side of the fins 203 is mounted a unit 501 consisting of plural heat pipes 602, which can dissipate heat transmitted to the middle portions thereof due to the exhaust air from a server 302, up and down vertically along the heat pipes 602 under capillary phenomenon.
Also, as shown in
Now, description will be made of temperature distribution in exhaust air from the server 301 when it is mounted on the rack 101.
In
This temperature distribution 603 indicates that there is a remarkable heat concentration. The air of concentrated heat passes through the assembly of the heat pipes 602 so that it is subjected to heat transfer due to condensation and evaporation caused between the low and high temperature portions of the heat pipes 602. Accordingly, the temperature distribution of the air that has passed through the assembly of the heat pipes 602 becomes flattened as indicated by a dotted straight line 601.
The locations of temperature sensors will be discussed below.
In this case, too, as shown in
As described above, according to this embodiment, the effect of correcting unevenness in temperature distribution can be obtained, and therefore there is no need for providing too many temperature sensors, that is, the number of temperature sensors that may otherwise be installed can be reduced. Note that the embodiment of this invention may not be limited to the structure shown in
A second embodiment of this invention is different from the first embodiment described above in that a flat-type heat pipe assembly is used.
The structure of an electronic apparatus rack according to the second embodiment of this invention will now be described with reference to
As shown in
This structure can more effectively dissipate concentrated heat.
Now, the relationship between the air flow rate and the ratio of the whole area occupied by all the heat pipes 801 to the entire cross sectional area of the air flow path, regarding the electronic apparatus rack according to the second embodiment of this invention, will be described with reference to
As interpreted from the graph shown in
Since the air flow rate falls steeply as the area proportion of the flat-type heat pipes 801 becomes greater than 70%, the ratio must preferably be set less than 70%.
A third embodiment is different from the second embodiment described above in that the unit 501 including heat pipes with fins is provided in the front door of the electronic apparatus rack, not in the rear door as in the second embodiment.
The structure of an electronic apparatus rack as the third embodiment of this invention will be described with reference to
As shown in
Thus, according to the third embodiment of this invention, the flat-type heat pipes 1102 are situated in the front door 1101 so that the flat-type heat pipes 1102 can make uniform the temperature distribution of the air entering the rack 101 from on the side of the front door 1101. Accordingly, it is possible to cool the servers 301 in the electronic apparatus rack 101 with a high efficiency.
This cooling mechanism can effectively be used in a data center using an ordinary air conditioning system, where heat concentration occurs due to the design and layout of the electronic apparatus rack 101 and the associated servers, resulting in an uneven temperature distribution of the air entering the electronic apparatus rack 101.
As shown in
In the example shown in
Note that in the fourth embodiment of this invention the refrigerant is naturally circulated since the outdoor heat exchanger 1001 is situated higher by a predetermined distance than the rear doors 102 and the cooling circuit is filled with a proper amount of refrigerant for continuous refrigerant flow.
Consequently, according to the fourth embodiment of this invention, heat exchange can be performed without a pressure pump.
As described heretofore, this invention was explained by way of embodiment, but it is needless to say that this invention is not limited only to those modes of practice described above, but can be embodied in various ways other than disclosed in this specification so long as what may come out is within the spirit and scope of this invention.
This invention relates to an electronic apparatus rack and can be applied widely to the field of cooling server racks wherein the temperature distribution of the exhaust air from plural servers is uneven to a considerable extent.
It should be further understood by those skilled in the art that although the foregoing description has been made on embodiments of the invention, the invention is not limited thereto and various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-268211 | Dec 2010 | JP | national |