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Benefits and limitations of tapping into stored energy for datacenters
217
Citations
37
References
2011
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringEnergy EfficiencyUps Battery KnobDatacenter-scale ComputingGreen Data CenterSystems EngineeringPower-aware SoftwarePower ManagementRecurring Electricity BillPower-aware ComputingElectrical EngineeringData Center SystemComputer EngineeringEnergy StorageData CentersData Center NetworksData Center ManagementSmart GridEnergy ManagementEnergy TransitionCloud ComputingDatacenter Power ConsumptionPower-efficient ComputingDemand Response
Datacenter power consumption has a significant impact on both its recurring electricity bill (Op-ex) and one-time construction costs (Cap-ex). Existing work optimizing these costs has relied primarily on throttling devices or workload shaping, both with performance degrading implications. In this paper, we present a novel knob of energy buffer (eBuff) available in the form of UPS batteries in datacenters for this cost optimization. Intuitively, eBuff stores energy in UPS batteries during "valleys" - periods of lower demand, which can be drained during "peaks" - periods of higher demand. UPS batteries are normally used as a fail-over mechanism to transition to captive power sources upon utility failure. Furthermore, frequent discharges can cause UPS batteries to fail prematurely. We conduct detailed analysis of battery operation to figure out feasible operating regions given such battery lifetime and datacenter availability concerns. Using insights learned from this analysis, we develop peak reduction algorithms that combine the UPS battery knob with existing throttling based techniques for minimizing datacenter power costs. Using an experimental platform, we offer insights about Op-ex savings offered by eBuff for a wide range of workload peaks/valleys, UPS provisioning, and application SLA constraints. We find that eBuff can be used to realize 15-45% peak power reduction, corresponding to 6-18% savings in Op-ex across this spectrum. eBuff can also play a role in reducing Cap-ex costs by allowing tighter overbooking of power infrastructure components and we quantify the extent of such Cap-ex savings. To our knowledge, this is the first paper to exploit stored energy - typically lying untapped in the datacenter - to address the peak power draw problem.
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