Matt Corddry, Facebook’s director of hardware engineering, should be
grateful to Tesla. Not because he drives one (he doesn’t), but because
the popularity of its electric cars could help Facebook take a little
more cost out of running its data centers.
Corddry runs Facebook’s
hardware engineering lab, which designs the cutting-edge servers,
storage gear and other equipment that power its services. It shares
those designs with the outside world through the Facebook-led Open Compute Project, and one of the technologies on his mind these days is lithium-ion batteries.
“The crossover moment for us was really electric
cars, especially when Tesla and the [Nissan] Leaf and those guys took
off,” Corddry said this week, as he showed a reporter around the
hardware lab at Facebook’s Menlo Park, California, headquarters.
“The
inflection point has just happened in the industry where lithium-ion is
cheaper to deploy than lead-acid for a data center UPS.”
The UPS,
or uninterruptible power supply, is a critical piece of equipment in
data centers. If there’s a power failure from the grid, the UPS kicks in
immediately to keep the IT equipment running during the minutes it
takes for a diesel generator to fire up and take over.
Lead-acid
batteries—the type that start your car in the morning (assuming you
don’t drive a Tesla, either)—are still cheaper per unit of energy than
lithium-ion, but the recharging equipment and regular maintenance they
require make them more costly overall, Corddry said.
They also take up a lot of space. Facebook designed its own lead-acid backup system, yet it still occupies a hulking cabinet 7 feet tall to provide backup power for just six racks of servers. Facebook uses thousands of those cabinets to run its services worldwide.
About
a year ago, it started work on a high-density lithium-ion battery pack
that slots directly into the server rack as if it were another piece of
IT equipment, eliminating the cabinet completely. The battery cells it’s
using are almost the exact same type you’d find in a high-end electric
car, except the batteries Facebook uses are designed to discharge all
their power in 90 seconds—enough time for the diesel generator to kick
in.
“If Tesla built a dragster instead of a car that’s meant to go
300 miles, this is the battery they’d use for the Tesla dragster,”
Corddry says.
The lithium-ion battery packs have other advantages,
too. There’s one to each half-rack of servers, so if a battery pack
fails the problem will be isolated to that group of servers. By
contrast, in some large data centers, a single UPS supports hundreds of
racks of equipment.
“Most applications are good at handling small
scale-failures, but almost no apps are good at handling a massive
concurrent failure,” Corddry says. “Big central UPSes can cause a
massive concurrent failure. Once the UPS goes, you have no line of
defense—you’re down.”
Putting the battery packs close to the
servers is also more energy efficient, he says, because the power
doesn’t traverse as many conversion points as with an external UPS. And
he expects the lithium-ion batteries to have a slightly longer life
span, though time will tell.
Facebook has just started pilot
testing the battery packs in its data centers, he said. It runs a
“synthetic load” for a couple of weeks to make sure the technology will
hold up, then switches to live customer data after that.
“Our plan is to have our mass-production gear hitting the data center next year,” Corddry said.
He
wouldn’t quantify the exact cost savings over lead-acid batteries, but
if Facebook is making the change throughout its infrastructure, it’s
safe to assume they could be significant.
If all goes well,
there’s no reason lithium-ion won’t find its way into enterprise data
centers. Facebook is designing the battery pack into the second version
of the Open Compute Project’s power shelf, which includes all the power
components for a server rack. The first version works with the big
lead-acid battery cabinets.
Like other OCP projects, the goal is
to come up with a more energy-efficient and flexible design than those
offered by the major manufacturers. Any company can pick up the design
and build it.
There are six battery packs in the v2 power shelf,
including two redundant ones in case of failure, for a total 13.2 kW of
backup power. That’s less than some high-performance computing centers
need, but for Facebook—and most other businesses—it’s plenty.
“People think of lithium-ion as a premium, expensive thing, but this is actually cheaper for us,” Corddry said.
Source: http://www.pcworld.com
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