Research by Omdia reveals that sustainable and innovative technologies such as chilled water and evaporative cooling, as well as forms of liquid cooling, are becoming more widely adopted
Vertiv (NYSE: VRT), a global provider of critical digital infrastructure and continuity solutions, has been ranked by technology analyst firm Omdia as the largest global supplier in data centre cooling market which continues to changes and innovation. The newly released research highlights that established heat rejection technologies such as Direct Expansion (DX), Chilled Water and Evaporative Cooling continue to dominate, while also becoming more sustainable. In addition, new technologies, like liquid cooling forms, are estimated to grow as the data center operators look for ways to further improve efficiency and deal with increasingly power-intensive compute.
The Omdia paper, “Data Center Thermal Management Report 2020”, published in the late 2020’s and based on 2018 and 2019 data, states that Vertiv has a 23.5 percent share of the global data center cooling market – more than 10 percent higher than its nearest rival. The market for data center thermal technology is set to increase from $3.3bn in 2020 to more than $4.3bn in 2024. Vertiv also leads the global market for perimeter thermal technologies with a 37.5 percent market share which is more than 20 percent higher than the next largest supplier.
In addition to analysing market position, the report provides insight and intelligence on how data center cooling technology is evolving. Established technologies such as chillers and perimeter cooling will remain a large proportion of the market. According to Omdia, split DX is still the primary form of heat rejection in data center thermal management, but chilled water and direct evaporative heat rejection are gaining momentum. In addition, cloud and collocation service provider momentum has accelerated, driving double-digit growth for air handling units (AHU).
Omdia further predicted a strong growth in forms of liquid cooling – immersion and direct-to-chip – that are expected to double between 2020 and 2024. Several factors are contributing to this shift, including increasing chip and server power consumption, edge growth, increasing rack densities, as well as energy efficiency and sustainability requirements.
Lucas Beran, principal analyst for Omdia’s cloud and data center research practice and the report’s author, said: “The data center thermal management market is on the cusp of an inflection point. Currently, existing air-based thermal products and solutions are driving growth but are limited by their ability to cool 10kW+ rack densities. New technologies, products, and designs are coming to market to help support these high-density deployments and more efficient operations leading to changing market dynamic through 2024.”
“With the rise in demand for heat rejection technologies, growth in edge computing, and increasing rack densities, data centers are increasingly looking for sustainable and energy efficient liquid cooling solutions – immersion and direct-to-chip. Being ranked as one of the leaders in the rapidly evolving cooling market is a testament to Vertiv’s commitment to constantly innovate our digital infrastructure solutions to support these continuously evolving requirements of our customers,” said Raghuveer Singh, director, thermal management for Vertiv in India.
Vertiv is also working with industry thought leadership groups and recently became a Platinum Member of the Open Compute Project (OCP). Vertiv’s role will include supporting initiatives on the adoption of liquid cooling through the Advanced Cooling Solutions (ACS) and Advanced Cooling Facility (ACF) projects. The aim is to bring guidelines and best practices for direct-to-chip and immersion liquid cooling technologies as well as enable practices for data center facilities to adopt liquid cooling.
Vertiv’s own research into thermal technologies also points to future innovation. According to Vertiv’s Data Center 2025: Closer to the Edge report, the data center industry has seen a large-scale shift to economization driven by hyperscale operators and colocation providers, while simultaneously driving heat removal closer to servers through rear door and liquid cooling systems designed to support the high-density racks common in high performance computing (HPC) facilities. Of the 800+ data center professionals that responded to the survey, 42 percent expect future cooling requirements to be met by mechanical systems, while 22 percent say they will be met with liquid cooling and outside air, a result likely driven by the more extreme rack densities being observed today.
To learn more about Vertiv, visit www.Vertiv.com/SWC
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