Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) has developed a new 40kVA-class 12ft container-type data centre with an immersion/air-cooled hybrid cooling system capable of simultaneously housing servers utilising three types of cooling methods.
The cooling methods are immersion cooling (25kVA), air cooling (8kVA), and water cooling (8kVA).
MHI will provide the product to customers for trial operation for a fixed period from this month and begin demonstration testing to support commercialization at the Yokohama Hardtech Hub (YHH), a manufacturing co-creation space on the grounds of MHI's Yokohama Dockyard & Machinery Works Honmoku Plant in Naka-ku, Yokohama.
MHI plans to commercialize this solution by the end of fiscal 2023.
The newly developed data centre is the successor to the container-type immersion cooling data centre that has been under development since 2021.
Servers with different cooling methods for different applications (by power density) can be mounted in the unit simultaneously, accommodating a diverse range servers and other devices for edge computing to process data at the periphery ("edge") of computer networks.
In addition, a space of 1.4m x 1.3m has been secured inside the container, dramatically improving workability when installing or removing servers.
Further, because of the integration and optimization of different cooling methods as a whole system, and installation at high density in a 12ft container, system performance in a 40°C environment is expected to achieve PUE(Note2) of 1.05 for immersion cooling alone (1.14 when immersion cooling and air cooling are used in combination).
For the demonstration testing of the data centre, Dell Technologies Japan Inc. provided a server for verification, and NEC Networks & System Integration Corporation will verify the IT equipment installation and server maintenance procedures.
In recent years, the demand for greater server capacity and more advanced data centres has increased. As companies shift data and processes to the cloud, and advance in generative AI drive its widespread adoption, reducing the amount of power consumed to remove the heat generated by servers, and minimizing the impact on the environment have become important issues.
Strong growth in data centre infrastructure is expected in the future at an accelerating pace.
Going forward, MHI Group will apply various cooling technologies and zero emission power products at data centres that utilize high-performance servers.
The expanded portfolio positions MHI Group to provide a one-stop solution for highly reliable and efficient power supply, cooling, and monitoring systems, as well as integrated control, in order to contribute to the realization of a carbon-neutral society and the conservation of the global environment.