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DC Power Saves 15% Energy and Cost @ Data Center

Krishna Dagli writes "Engineers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and about 20 technology vendors this month will wrap up a demonstration that they said shows DC power distribution in the data center can save up to 15 percent or more on energy consumption and cost. The proof-of-concept program, set up at Sun Microsystems' Newark, Calif., facility, offered a side-by-side comparison of a traditional AC power system and a 380-volt DC distribution system, running on both Intel-based servers and Sun systems."

3 of 371 comments (clear)

  1. dc / dc converter by wwwillem · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Would be interesting to know what the efficiency is of a 380 -> 12/5 DC-DC converter, compared to a traditional 110 AC -> 12/5 DC converter. This is of course only just a part of the total picture, but in the past this has often been mentioned as the reason for _not_ going DC. Maybe with modern switching power supplies, that problem has disappeared.

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  2. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  3. Re:Here, here! by quoll · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's true for transmission over longer distances, but what about those short distances in the data room? Or for that matter, in my home office?

    Almost every device I own uses 4.7V or 12V. I look around at work here, and I can see power strips full of transformers, all of which are knocking back the AC power to one of a couple of DC voltage levels. Every one of those transformers has its own losses, most of which dissipates as heat. They're also large, making it difficult to fit them all into a strip, and their heavy, making it difficult to balance or hang the strip where it's most needed. At home I have DC transformers for the monitor, the switch, the firewall/router, the WiFi, the PDA recharger, the BT mouse recharging dock, the USB hub, the TV tuner box, etc, etc. It's got to be a safety hazard.

    Then we have the PCs, which are also using 2 (OK, 4) predefined levels of DC voltage, and have their own transformers and rectifiers to do it. These get so hot they even need their own fans!

    Why isn't this stuff standardized, and power strips can instead contain one single transformer/recitifer package, with DC sockets, or retractable DC wires coming out of them? Even if we ignored PCs and only did the external peripherals for now, we'd still get a big saving in power just by having fewer transformers.