Most high rises have cooling systems. They run ambient temp water to all of the floors, and tenant hvac units cool their server rooms by pumping heat into that water.
It then goes through the loop and gets cooled back down to ambient with large radiator systems outside.
It’s closed loop.
There’s no reason this can’t be applied to datacenters.
I’d imagine DCs are doing it the cheapest way they can. But I think comparing the high rises to a DC doesn’t really work just due to the scale difference and the amount of heat needing removed. I’m sure there’s a way that it could be made something of a closed loop for DCs, but I’m guessing it would be a bit different if a process compared to high rises. I wouldn’t be surprised if a DC removed as much heat as a year of every high rise in NYC in a day or less…
Most high rises have cooling systems. They run ambient temp water to all of the floors, and tenant hvac units cool their server rooms by pumping heat into that water.
It then goes through the loop and gets cooled back down to ambient with large radiator systems outside.
It’s closed loop.
There’s no reason this can’t be applied to datacenters.
I’d imagine DCs are doing it the cheapest way they can. But I think comparing the high rises to a DC doesn’t really work just due to the scale difference and the amount of heat needing removed. I’m sure there’s a way that it could be made something of a closed loop for DCs, but I’m guessing it would be a bit different if a process compared to high rises. I wouldn’t be surprised if a DC removed as much heat as a year of every high rise in NYC in a day or less…