An international consortium - consisting of Hungarian data center engineering company H1 Systems, British cooling manufacturer EcoCooling specialising in the design of fresh-air cooling systems, German research institute Fraunhofer IOSB, Swedish research institute RISE and infrastructure developer Boden Business Agency - were awarded funding from EU’s H2020 program to build and validate an efficient operating research data center facility.
The project objective was to create, test and validate a prototype that is energy and cost efficient so that fully or in part the concept can be applied in the future around Europe. The prototype was called BodenType Data Center – and the first data center was called BodenType DC One.
The need for more efficient data centers is driven by operational expense and environmental implications. The data center market is growing and they are becoming an integrated part of data services. The main growth drivers are digital services, which include cloud computing, data analytics, big data, internet of things (IoT), multimedia applications, virtualization, and machine learning. Data centers have become critical infrastructure for society, therefore safety, reliability and availability are at the core of the prototype design and operation. Data center environmental impact is a growing concern due to their increasing energy consumption, embodied emissions, and their production of untapped waste heat.
To increase both OPEX and CAPEX efficiency, we applied a novel building design approach; namely a modular data center design and with direct fresh-air cooling systems combined with evaporative cooling apparatus, operating on solely harmonic free renewable energy, and using no centralized UPS capacity.
Aside from the building design, BodenTypeDC also addressed the questions of cooling efficiency, which identified and validated the importance of using a holistic view in the field of cooling control to further reduce the energy usage of data centers.
When closing the 39-month project we can proudly state that Boden Type DC fulfilled its objectives:
- validated that the adopted innovative data center concept met the energy efficiency, financial, reliability and other targets in near operational and real operational environments,
- validated and improved the software tools for modelling and simulating the operation of the facility and cooling equipment as well as the associated capital and operational costs,
- demonstrated the results in a “living lab”, a real environment to customers, end-users, and other stakeholders,
- demonstrated through accurate simulation that BodenType DC can be replicated in other European areas with less favourable climatic conditions,
- showcased a best practice for European data center industry players not only by establishing the prototype but also by articulating a set of guidelines for data center design, build and operation.
- collected a rich and openly available dataset of the full operational envelope of the data center running on direct fresh-air cooling with no centralized UPS.
Beyond that, the project has built fruitful international cooperation within the consortium, also with other industry players and with other energy-efficiency and sustainability related initiatives. The project has also contributed to the knowhow and expertise of each consortium members. Finally, consortium partners collectively won one of the most prestigious awards of the industry: the DCD Award as the Best Non-profit Industry Initiative.