Groundwater cooling of a supercomputer in Perth, Western Australia: hydrogeological simulations and thermal sustainability | Refroidissement par eaux souterraines d’un superordinateur à Perth, Australie Occidentale: simulations hydrogéologiques et durabilité thermique Enfriamiento por agua subterránea de una supercomputadora en Perth, Australia Occidental: simulaciones hidrogeológicas y sustentabilidad térmica 西澳大利亚珀斯超级计算机地下水冷却: 水文地质模拟和热量可持续性 Resfriamento por águas subterrâneas em Perth, Austrália Ocidental: simulações hidrogeológicas e sustentabilidade termal
2015
Sheldon, Heather A. | Schaubs, Peter M. | Rachakonda, Praveen K. | Trefry, Michael G. | Reid, Lynn B. | Lester, Daniel R. | Metcalfe, Guy | Poulet, Thomas | Regenauer-Lieb, Klaus
Groundwater cooling (GWC) is a sustainable alternative to conventional cooling technologies for supercomputers. A GWC system has been implemented for the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre in Perth, Western Australia. Groundwater is extracted from the Mullaloo Aquifer at 20.8 °C and passes through a heat exchanger before returning to the same aquifer. Hydrogeological simulations of the GWC system were used to assess its performance and sustainability. Simulations were run with cooling capacities of 0.5 or 2.5 Mega Watts thermal (MWth), with scenarios representing various combinations of pumping rate, injection temperature and hydrogeological parameter values. The simulated system generates a thermal plume in the Mullaloo Aquifer and overlying Superficial Aquifer. Thermal breakthrough (transfer of heat from injection to production wells) occurred in 2.7–4.3 years for a 2.5 MWth system. Shielding (reinjection of cool groundwater between the injection and production wells) resulted in earlier thermal breakthrough but reduced the rate of temperature increase after breakthrough, such that shielding was beneficial after approximately 5 years pumping. Increasing injection temperature was preferable to increasing flow rate for maintaining cooling capacity after thermal breakthrough. Thermal impacts on existing wells were small, with up to 10 wells experiencing a temperature increase ≥ 0.1 °C (largest increase 6 °C).
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