Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 24 segundos...
Inicio  /  Buildings  /  Vol: 13 Par: 10 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

BIM and Computational Fluid Dynamics Analysis for Thermal Management Improvement in Data Centres

Sergey Pogorelskiy and Imre Kocsis    

Resumen

One of the most energy-intensive facilities requiring a comprehensive and well-optimised cooling system is the data centre. Air containment across the data centre is a key thermal management and energy-saving strategy that enhances the performance of data centres. The majority of modern energy-efficient data centres use some type of air containment. The primary advantage of aisle separation and containment is the decrease in the air temperature at the server inlet by reducing the mixing of hot air with cold air. In order to ascertain the volume of literature relating to corridor insulation, we conducted a literature review. Currently, there have been numerous articles regarding the application of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis, however, publications delineating the integration of building information modelling (BIM) principles for corridor separation are still limited. Research specifically targeting data centre corridor insulation is somewhat limited. As a result of this analysis, the most common methods used to isolate hot or cold aisles within a data centre were identified. To determine the most effective type of corridor insulation, the BIM family was created in Autodesk Revit. The model includes 15 telecom cabinets containing information technology (IT) equipment, eight inter-row air conditioners, and one UPS. The model was used for the CFD analysis of the air temperature in different zones of the room. Visualisation of the results using gradient temperature distributions at different levels provides a complete picture of the microclimate formation in the room and allowed the advantage of the hot aisle isolation scheme to be demonstrated.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Min Lee Lee, Yee Linn Lee, Sxue Liang Goh, Chai Hoon Koo, See Hung Lau and Siaw Yah Chong    
Unforeseen ground conditions are some of the main contributors to construction cost over-runs and late completion. Recent research trends have witnessed the scopes of building information modeling (BIM) technology being extended to subsoil and substructu... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures

 
Qingxiang Chen, Jing Chen and Wumeng Huang    
Building information modeling (BIM), with detailed geometry and semantics of the indoor environment, has become an essential part of smart city development and city information modeling (CIM). However, visualizing large-scale BIM models within geographic... ver más

 
Jiayi Yan, Karen Kensek, Kyle Konis and Douglas Noble    
Scientific visualization has been an essential process in the engineering field, enabling the tracking of large-scale simulation data and providing intuitive and comprehendible graphs and models that display useful data. For computational fluid dynamics ... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Jernej Tekavec and Anka Lisec    
This study is focused on indoor navigation network extraction for navigation applications based on available 3D building data and using SFCGAL library, e.g. simple features computational geometry algorithms library. In this study, special attention is gi... ver más

 
David Mencías Carrizosa,Pepa Cassinello Plaza,Ignacio Payá Zaforteza     Pág. 3 - 11
The first and unavoidable phase in the intervention in the Heritage and the existing building is the realization of a survey. Currently, its purpose is to build a digital geometric model in a computer system that serves to represent the built object and ... ver más