You may have seen several article about Microsoft's experimental undersea data centres.Here's a recent summary of IEEE's "Dunking the Data Center"http://www.leverege.com/blog/project-natick-underwater-data-centers"To take advantage of freely available cool air, we've seen Google open a data center in Finland and Facebook open a data center in a Swedish city near the Arctic Circle. Now Microsoft wants to build one underwater to follow suit. Not only do they argue that this plan is feasible, they think it could also "reduce construction costs, make it easier to power these facilities with renewable energy, and even improve their performance," according to Sean James, a Microsoft engineer. Before validating James's claims, putting a data center underwater comes with a myriad of challenges:1. The container must stay dry. 2. Sea water should cool the servers efficiently. 3. Containers must be free from barnacles and other sea life that may inhibit the cooling process. Why go through all this trouble to build something underwater, when you can build it in Finland or Sweden like the other tech giants? To this end, James postulates several advantages other than the cooling factor. First of all, the Microsoft team argues that building underwater pods avoids the hassle that comes with constructing data centers on land. Today, companies must deal with building codes, taxes, electricity supply, and network connectivity in other countries before putting in the rack of servers. On the other hand, the ocean provides a relatively uniform environment for these underwater pods. These pods can be made almost on demand (instead of planning it out and negotiating with governments and land owners long before) and deploy at any coastal site with little customization. Microsoft's goal is to deploy these pods within 90 days from purchase. Microsoft also points to the the remote locations of these data centers as a limitation in how fast these servers can respond to requests. They cite that almost half the world's pouplation lives within 100 kms of the ocean, concluding that bringing these pods closer to where we live will add speed benefits. Lastly, Microsoft mentions that many data centers use evaporation to cool the surrounding air, consuming more water. In Microsoft's case, they'll be using surrounding water to transfer the heat from the air out, so will not be "consuming" water in a non-renewable manner. Even at intermediate depths between 10–200m, the water remains between 14–18 °C, making it an ideal environment for cooling data centers."
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