|
ABSTRACT:
High density IT equipment stresses the power density capability of modern data centers. Installation and unmanaged proliferation of this equipment can lead to unexpected problems with power and cooling infrastructure including overheating, overloads, and loss of redundancy. The ability to measure and predict power and cooling capability at the rack enclosure level is required to ensure predictable performance and optimize use of the physical infrastructure resource. This paper describes the principles for achieving power and cooling capacity management.
|
|
Author
Neil Rasmussen
Chief Technical Officer
,
APC-MGE
Neil is the Chief Technical Officer of APC-MGE. He establishes the technology direction for the world’s largest R&D budget devoted to power, cooling, and rack infrastructure for critical networks. Neil is currently leading the effort at APC-MGE to develop high-efficiency, modular, scalable data center infrastructure solutions and is the principal architect of the APC-MGE InfraStruXure system.
|