ORCID Identifier(s)

0009-0000-5514-9900

Graduation Semester and Year

2023

Language

English

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering

Department

Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering

First Advisor

Dereje Agonafer

Second Advisor

Ratan Kumar

Abstract

The increasing demand for high performance computing in applications such as Internet of Things, Deep Learning, Big data for crypto-mining, virtual reality, healthcare research on genomic sequencing, cancer treatment etc. has led to the growth of hyper scale datacenters. To meet the cooling energy demands of HPC datacenters efficient cooling technologies must be adopted. Traditional air cooling, direct to chip liquid cooling and immersion are some of those methods. Among all, Liquid cooling is superior compared to various air-cooling methods in terms of energy consumption. Direct on-chip cooling using cold plate technology is one such method used in removing heat from high power electronic components such as CPUs and GPUs in a broader sense. Over the years Thermal Design Power (TDP) is rapidly increasing and will continue to increase in the coming years for not only CPUS and GPUs but also associated electronic components like DRAMs, Platform Control Hub (PCH) and other I/O chipsets on a typical server board. Therefore, unlike hybrid cooling which uses liquid for cold plates and air as the secondary medium of cooling the associated electronics, we foresee using immersion-based fluids to cool the rest of the electronics in the server. The broader focus of this research is to study the effects of adopting immersion cooling, with integrated cold plate for high performance systems. Although there are several other factors involved in the study, the focus of this paper will be optimization of cold plate microchannels for immersion-based fluids in an immersion cooled environment. Since immersion fluids are dielectric and the fluids used in cold plates are conductive, it exposes us to a major risk of leakage into the tank and short circuiting the electronics. Therefore, we propose using the immersed fluid to pump into the cold plate. However, it leads to a suspicion of poor thermal performance and associated pumping power due to the difference in viscosity and other fluid properties. To address the thermal and flow performance, the objective is to optimize the cold plate micro-channel fin parameters based on thermal and flow performance by evaluating thermal resistance and pressure drop across the cold plate.

Keywords

TDP, Thermal design power, HPC, High-performance computing, CDU, Coolant distribution unit, DLCS, Direct liquid cooling system

Disciplines

Aerospace Engineering | Engineering | Mechanical Engineering

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

31288-2.zip (8713 kB)

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