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Startup Uses SpaceX Tech to Cool Data Centers With Less Power and No Water

🤖 AI Summary

**カーマン・インダストリーズ(米カリフォルニア)の新冷却システム**

- データセンターの冷却に、SpaceX のロケットエンジン技術を応用した高速回転コンプレッサー(30,000 rpm)を採用。
- 冷媒は高圧液体二酸化炭素(CO₂)で、従来のファンや水冷に比べて **エネルギー消費を半分以下に抑え、使用水をゼロ** にできる。
- 設備占有面積は従来の **80%削減** が可能で、冷却負荷の 40%を占める電力使用量の大幅削減が期待される。
- 冷却した熱は空気に放散できるほか、余熱回収で発電にも利用可能。
- チームの約 1/3 は元 SpaceX/Rocket Lab のエンジニアで、航空宇宙・EV技術を転用。
- 最近 **2,000万ドルの資金調達** に成功し、ロングビーチでのコンプレッサー製造を今年中に開始予定。

データセンターが米国全体の電力消費の約 8%、水使用は年間 330 億ガロンに達する中、同社の技術は環境負荷低減とコスト削減の新たな解決策として注目されている。
California-based Karman Industries "says it has developed a cooling system that uses SpaceX rocket engine technology to rein in the environmental impact of data centers," reports the Los Angeles Times, "chilling them with less space, less power and no water." Karman has developed a cooling system similar to the heat pumps in the average home, except its pumps use liquid carbon dioxide as refrigerant, which is circulated using rocket engine technology rather than fans. The company's efficient pumps can reduce the space required for data center cooling equipment by 80%. Over the years, data centers have used fans and air conditioning to blow cold air on the chips. Bigger facilities pass cold liquid through tubes near the chips to absorb the heat. This hot liquid is sent outside to a cooling yard, where sprawling networks of pipes use as much water as a city of 50,000 people to remove the heat. A 50 megawatt data center also uses enough electricity to power a mid-sized city... Cooling systems account for up to 40% of a data center's power consumption and an average midsized data center consumes more than 35,000 gallons of water per day... U.S. data centers will consume about 8% of all electricity in the country by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency... The cooling systems are projected to use up to 33 billion gallons of water by 2028 per year... To serve this seemingly insatiable market, Karman has developed a rotating compressor that spins at 30,000 revolutions per minute — nearly 10 times faster than traditional compressors — to move heat... About a third of Karman's 23-person team came from SpaceX or Rocket Lab, and they co-opted technologies from aerospace engineering and electric vehicles to design the mechanics for the high-speed motors. The system uses a special type of carbon dioxide under high pressure to transfer heat from the data center to the outside air. Depending on the conditions, it can do the same amount of cooling using less than half the energy. Karman's heat pump can either reject heat to air, or route it into extra cooling, or even power generation. The company "recently raised $20 million," according to the article, "and expects to start building its first compressors in Long Beach later this year...."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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