- Source: HP Performance Optimized Datacenter
The HP Performance Optimized Datacenter (POD) is a range of three modular data centers manufactured by HP.
Housed in purpose-built modules of standard shipping container form-factor of either 20 feet or 40 feet in length the data centers are shipped preconfigured with racks, cabling and equipment for power and cooling. They can support technologies from HP or third parties. The claimed capacity is the equivalent of up to 10,000 square feet of typical data center capacity depending on the model.
Depending on the model, they use either chilled water cooling or a combination of direct expansion air cooling.
HP POD 20c and 40c
The POD 40c was launched in 2008. This 40-foot modular data center has a maximum power capacity up to 27 kW per rack. The POD 40c supports 3,500 compute nodes or 12,000 LFF hard drives. HP has claimed this offers the computing equivalent of 4,000 square foot of traditional data center space.
The POD 20c was launched in 2010. This modular data center is housed in a 20-foot container. This version houses 10 industry-standard 50U racks of hardware. The POD uses an efficient cooling design of variable speed fans, hot and cold aisle containment and close coupled cooling to maximize capacity and efficiency. The POD 20c can operate at a Power Usage Effectiveness of 1.25. PODs can maintain cold aisle temperatures higher than typical brick and mortar data centers. The temperature of the cold aisle in traditional data centers is typically 68 to 72 degrees, whereas the POD can efficiently operate at temperatures in this range up to 90 degrees.
Both the 20c and the 40c are water-cooled. The benefit of water cooling is higher capacity and less power usage than traditional air-cooled systems.
HP POD 240a
The HP POD 240a was launched in June 2011. It can be configured with two rows of 44 extra height 50U racks that could house 4,400 server nodes of typical size, or 7,040 server nodes of the densest size. HP claimed that the typical brick and mortar data center required to house this equipment would be 10,000 square feet of floor space.
HP claims "near-perfect" Energy efficiency for the POD 240a, which it nicknames the "EcoPOD". HP says it has recorded estimated Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) ratios of 1.05 to 1.4, depending on IT load and location. The perfect efficiency would be a Power usage effectiveness (PUE) of 1.0.
The POD 240a has a refrigerant-based air cooled HVAC system with air-side economization When the ambient air conditions are cool enough, the 240a uses economizer or free air mode—where outside air can be taken in and circulated inside the modular data center to cool the IT equipment.
Customers
In September 2013, eBay announced that they were "deploying the world’s largest modular data center, with 44 rack positions and 1.4Megawatts of power" using HP EcoPODs.
See also
HP Flexible Data Center
IBM Portable Modular Data Center
Sun Modular Data Center
References
External links
HP Performance Optimized Datacenter (POD) Archived 2011-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
HP Performance Optimized Datacenter (POD) 240a
HP Performance Optimized Datacenter (POD) 20c and 40c Archived 2012-04-15 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- HP Performance Optimized Datacenter
- Modular data center
- Intel Xe
- Data center
- Content delivery network
- Windows Server 2003
- Sun Microsystems
- Steele (supercomputer)
- Commodity computing
- AMD