Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Cooling Computers with Tiny Jet Engines

Hewlett-Packard is adapting fans from radio-controlled jets to relieve heat-stressed computer servers.

By Wade Roush

Thursday, June 15, 2006

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

The computer servers that fill huge data centers are producing more heat with every new generation of processors. It's a problem that's sending engineers on a search for cooling fans that are both small enough to fit inside ever-smaller server chassis and powerful enough to dispel increasing amounts of heat. At Hewlett-Packard, they've found one answer in an unexpected place: model jet airplanes.

A cutaway view of Hewlett-Packard’s new electric-ducted server cooling fan, which was adapted from model jet airplane engines. (Image courtesy of Hewlett-Packard.)

To cool its next generation of commercial servers, the company is using electric-ducted fans (EDFs), originally developed by model airplane hobbyists to power radio-controlled jets. Essentially propellers in a box, the fans run so fast and produce so much air pressure that they should be able to provide the cooling needs for the next several generations of HP servers, according to Wade Vinson, an engineer in the company's Industry Standard Server Group.

In an electric-ducted fan, which is the most popular form of radio-controlled jet motor, the fan's blades are placed inside a tube, or "duct." Because the blades are shorter than typical propeller blades, they spin faster, thereby creating more thrust. Furthermore, the duct reduces noise and prevents air vortices from forming around the tips of the blades -- which saps the thrust produced by traditional propellers.

Of course computer servers don't need thrust, since they generally don't go anywhere. Instead, Vinson and his team showed that EDF blades can be redesigned to produce pressure. The fan blades on their prototypes force air into a server's chassis, so that a certain volume of air per minute flows past the heat sinks (aluminum or copper fins attached to most CPUs) and carries away heat through convection.

The end product is HP's Active Cool Fan, scheduled to debut in its next generation of BladeSystem servers. At their most efficient setting, according to Vinson, the fans consume just one-third the power of traditional computer fans; and they're smaller than regular fans, which means engineers can make the servers thinner and pack more electronics into them. "If you have 10 traditional servers today, we could put 16 servers in the same space," says Vinson.

The prototype HP fans are built from sturdier, more reliable parts than today's computer fans, according to Vinson, and they deliver air with enough force to cool the smaller, denser, and hotter servers on HP's drawing boards. "They literally blow you away," he says; "it's like picking up a leaf blower."

The time is ripe for better computer cooling technology. In essence, CPUs are tiny radiators, which happen to do computational work as they busily convert electricity into heat. Every watt of energy used by a data center's servers in the form of electricity has to be expelled as heated air. But, as computer manufacturers make processors smaller and faster and pack them more closely together, it's become harder and harder to push enough air through a server to keep the electronics running smoothly.

This situation can translate into huge problems for corporate data centers with hundreds or thousands of servers -- such as the ones that keep our online economy running at facilities managed by Google, Yahoo, eTrade, and the like. Servers that overheat can shut down, slowing processing and increasing the load on other servers; and they force companies to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on new air-conditioning systems and the electricity to run them.

Comments

  • go to SEARS
    I thought regular air conditioning and cooling technology is mature and efficient already. This jet engine technology tries to reinvent the wheel. What for? Go to Sears, and they'll install a reliable cooling system.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (XYZ)
    06/15/2006
    Posts:1
    • SWaP
      The goal is to provide enough cooling at the source within Size Weight and Power form mobile configurations (airplanes, etc).  These fans provide more cooling PER WATT than conventional fans; even Sears Best a/c units are energy sieves. 
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Mike)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
    • s
      s
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (s)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
    • bad idea...
      Generally, the chilled air systems in datacenters make any system sold by sears look like pathetic, dying window units.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (M)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
  • Cabinet vs. Room Cooling
    These fans go into the computer chassis itself.  A separate cooling system is required for the room full of chassis, but that's not what this article is about.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Phil)
    06/16/2006
    Posts:1
    • Cabinet vs. room cooling
      Some groups that are involved in data center cooling include www.7x24exchange.org, www.afcom.come, www.uptimeinstitute.com, www.tc99.ashraetcs.com and www.datacenterdynamics.com just to name a few - it's a hot industry topic with conferences focused on it almost every month
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Jeff)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
    • Cabinet cooling
      These fans are built for the next geneartion of Blade systems. So they are not integrated in to individual servers but they are in a smaller rack cabinet. There are 8 redundant fans running to cool 16 servers and their power power unit.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Oskar)
      06/19/2006
      Posts:1
  • Jet engine wattage?
    How much wattage does it take to run one of these little jet engines?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Blue)
    06/16/2006
    Posts:1
    • Noise levels?
      What is the relative noise levels of these fans to conventional but larger fans?
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (arg2)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
      • Noise levels?
        Having worked with those fans and having run an IT shop for 11 years I can tell you those fans will be VERY loud indeed. And you're right, the heat has to go someplace, so larger cooling systems are needed.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (Bk)
        06/16/2006
        Posts:1
        • Cooling
          Your best bet is a vaulted floor and air handlers that blow chilled air through the floor up through the racks.
          Rate this comment: 12345
          Guest (Scotty)
          06/16/2006
          Posts:1
          • Cooling
            No, you do not blow heat up through racks, you blow *IN FRONT* of them- they are designed to flow air front to back.  Proper airflow in a rack is depnedant on two things 1) tight racking of the systems one atop the other(no gaps) and 2) proper use of the cable management systems that come with the systems, thereby keeping the cables bound and tight reducing thier resistance to airflow.  Most racks have louvered or perforated front and rear doors for this purpose.  On particularly hot racks, I have had to put vent tiles behind them as well to wisk the exiting heat away.  More important than anything else is having proper airflow under and through the floor.  Too many datacenters i've been in have piles of cables under the floor that upsets the flow of air from room ac.
            Rate this comment: 12345
            Guest (terps)
            06/16/2006
            Posts:1
            • Cooling
              many of us in the data center cooling business would debate the concept and effect of putting any kind of vent (perf or cutout) at the back of the server rack - it has a negative effect on overall cooling as well as energy efficiency - www.tc99.ashraetcs.org, www.koldlok.com
              Rate this comment: 12345
              Guest (Jeff)
              06/16/2006
              Posts:1
      • LOUD
        I have one of these fans in a model airplane i own and it is super super loud.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (CHris)
        06/17/2006
        Posts:1
    • Wattage
      Depends, in their origional RC usage, some of these fans can run off motor needing 3+KW of power...... but then they are moving A LOT, I MEAN A LOT of air at well over 150 mph exhaust speed.

      they are very very noisy though.. I would have thought water cooling with radiators mounted outside the building (like heat exchangers for AC units) would be a MUCH MUCH MUCH better way to go about things!
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Lewis)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
      • Water cooling
        I don't think water is all that efficient when cooling small, hot sources.  Ideally you'd want to blast helium at high velocity onto the heat sink fins, cool the helium in a large refrigeration unit, and  send cold helium back to the processor. 
        The only problem is that the techs start talking like Donald Duck.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (JD)
        06/17/2006
        Posts:1
        • Re: Water cooling
          Water is far superior the problem is retrofitting everything, and the possibility of leaks!
          Think about it this way water is 1000 times denser than air (1.2Kg/m3) compared to water at (1003kg/m3). So using simple force convective cool, the more mass you pass by a heat source the better you can remove heat away from that heat source! Helium is less dense than air so air is better.
            Thermal Engineer
          Brian Glassman
          Rate this comment: 12345

          briang1621
          06/19/2009
          Posts:124
          Avg Rating:
          4/5
    • It's not a jet engine
      These are not jet engines. They are nothing more than little electric fans inside a shroud. The shroud improves the efficiency of the fan.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Chris)
      06/16/2006
      Posts:1
      • Not a jet engine
        No, they could'nt be, could they? Probably the only reason the writer continued in his error was because they do power models of jet aircraft. To some folks, any engine on something that looks like a jet aircraft must be a jet engine. Besides, if it was a true jet engine, it would have to be used to suck the air out of computers; any air blown into a computer by a true jet would heat up the circuits past the melting point.
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (George)
        06/16/2006
        Posts:1
        • Not a jet engine
          Only in the title are these fans referred to as "jet engines" and it could be argured the the engines adjective is modifying "tiny jet" and not tiny modifying "jet engine."  It's not the point of the article anyway, but saying the writer " continued in his error" is quite the false statement.
          Rate this comment: 12345
          Guest (Phil)
          06/17/2006
          Posts:1
          • Its all WRONG
            Engine is a noun.  Jet and tiny are adjectives describing the type of engine.

            For it to be a jet engine, the intention of the device would have to be to create thrust. 
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_engine

            Its intent is to move air, therefore in RC aircraft and this application it is a ducted fan.
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducted_fan

            Most modern jet engines are really high-bypass turbofans.
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbofan
            Rate this comment: 12345
            Guest (Colin)
            06/21/2006
            Posts:1
    • Re: Jet engine wattage?
      its cool
      Rate this comment: 12345

      mechie
      09/02/2006
      Posts:1
  • Wow
    I don’t think this getting the credit it deserves. This is huge. I have tried every thing to manage heat, noise and size.  If I can increase air flow, reduce size, decrease wattage and reduce the number of cooling devices. I would be very happy. This will change modern cooling and push us well past the 4.0 gigahertz processor block.  This is as big as CD-ROM.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Nihls)
    06/16/2006
    Posts:1
  • Vertical Cooling up through the rack
    We do that today at our datacenter and it works great. See hear.
    www.verari.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest
    06/16/2006
    Posts:1
  • Vertical Cooling up through the rack
    We do that today at our datacenter and it works great. See hear.
    www.verari.com
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest
    06/16/2006
    Posts:1
    • it came up at the right time
      just a little after I finished my copy right application for a high speed adjustable pitch arrangement. (CPP)
      Incorporating with the situation I have worked for nearly 3 years in the HP(Compaq) server support department I see were the brain got triggered.
      its just one step closer to another new cool product.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Ingo)
      07/17/2006
      Posts:1
  • Cooling Fans Won't Be Needed Soon
    With the soming of the new era in computers that is unknown to the general public, cooling fans won't even be needed. Very soon the signal process that creates all the heat in a computer will be replaced and a need for a cooling fan will cease to exist. This evolution in computers is in the R&D stages as we speak and it will render current systems obsolete.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Mike Swisher)
    06/18/2006
    Posts:1
    • Cooling Fans Won't Be Needed Soon
      Do you mean reversible logic or what?
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (M. Schlegel)
      06/19/2006
      Posts:1
      • Not Reverse Logic
        The technology I am refering to is quite the opposite of what we currently use today in signal transmission. Everything in existence in the field of electronics utilizes telephony as its core signal transmission ie; digital compression. The new technology operates opposite of telephony. With telephony we start with the sine wave and compress information on a sideband and put a gaurd channel in between them to keep the reduce the noise on the carrier. With Data Flow Enhancement , Digital information is encrypted directly onto the analog carrier wave and the more information applied the faster it goes. It operates alot more efficiently. If you would like more detailed information explaining this technology email me and I will send it to you. swishertech@yahoo.com
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (Mike Swisher)
        06/19/2006
        Posts:1
        • Above comment is off-topic spam
          I don't know where to start refuting it, but first off, this is not the reason computers produce heat.  Heat is produced by resistance to the flow of electrons in the microprocessor and by electron leakage in the infinitesimally small circuits.
          Rate this comment: 12345
          Guest (Colin)
          06/21/2006
          Posts:1
          • Exactly
            By changing the type of process utilized by the microprocessor to a signal that doesn't provide resistance , wouldn't you then eliminate the need for cooling?
            Rate this comment: 12345
            Guest (Michael Swisher)
            08/01/2006
            Posts:1
  • Water or Liquid Cooling the Very Best
    The heat transfer rate with a selected liquid is or can be much, much much higher than with
    a gas like air or other gases, on the order of 20-40 times, so long
    term, liquid is the answer,, of course, that poses other problems
    in redesign,, LFM
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Lee McClune)
    06/19/2006
    Posts:1
    • liquid cooling
      for the record - water has 3400 times the heat removal properties of air - liquid CO2 has even greater heat removal capacity
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Jeff)
      06/19/2006
      Posts:1
      • liquid cooling
        Liquid cooling requires fans for the radiator as you can't cool very well with boiling hot liquid (usually antifreeze right now).
        Rate this comment: 12345
        Guest (kevin)
        06/29/2006
        Posts:1
  • Why do we just use Sun T2000
    http://www.sun.com/servers/coolthreads/t2000/test/overview_p.jsp?name=P
    Triple the throughput, half the power, half the size. This much performance has never been available in such a compact server, much less one that can save you millions in power and cooling costs. The Sun Fire T2000 Server is a breakthrough discovery that will rewrite the future.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Jeevan)
    06/27/2006
    Posts:1
  • liquid cooling
    it is a wonderful discovery
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (mani)
    06/29/2006
    Posts:1

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Malleable Maps, Artistic Robots and Bubble Interfaces
Technology Review January/February 2010

Current Issue

Security in the Ether
Information technology's next grand challenge will be to secure the cloud--and prove we can trust it.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2010 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.