EMERSON
PROVIDES CRITICAL COOLING TECHNOLOGY
FOR GROUNDBREAKING SUPERCOMPUTER AT VIRGINIA TECH
Emerson
Network Power Part of Global Team Developing “Supercomputing Cluster”
ST.
LOUIS, September 22, 2003 – Emerson Network Power, a business of
Emerson (NYSE:EMR), is being hailed as a key technology provider helping to
develop “one of the top-ranked supercomputing facilities in the world” at
Virginia Tech, university officials said.
Emerson is
“pulling off miracles, raising glass ceilings and opening locked doors” with an
international team of experts designing the supercomputer, said Hassan Aref, dean of Virginia
Tech’s College of Engineering.
Emerson
Network Power designed and provided the technology for the supercomputer’s
precision cooling system to keep its heat load under control, protecting
against shutdowns that could result in losses of valuable research and data.
The cooling
system is especially critical because of heat generated by the supercomputer’s
first-of-its-kind “cluster” of 1,100 personal computers. Clustering
technology provides educational institutions the ability to deploy
supercomputing power without incurring the higher cost of a single, larger
unit.
“Based on the
heat load for this supercomputing cluster, normal air conditioning units are
not sufficient to protect this system’s high-stakes, sensitive electronics,”
Emerson President James G. Berges said.
“Emerson Network Power’s new high-density precision cooling system answered the
supercomputer’s unique heat load requirements, as well as the university’s
budget and tight time constraints for this project.”
Standard air
conditioning technology for the supercomputer also presented the dilemma of
wind velocities up to 60 mph under the raised floor of the computer room, said
Patricia Arvin, associate vice president, information systems and computing,
Virginia Tech.
“Emerson has worked
to solve every problem we've encountered – including developing a cooling
solution for high-density computer configurations – and they've done it in
record time,” Arvin said.
Emerson
Network Power technology for the supercomputer includes the Liebert XD™ family
of cooling solutions, designed to deliver efficient, high-capacity supplemental
cooling without consuming valuable data center floor space. Powerful fan
units, coils and chillers draw hot air away from the supercomputer’s sensitive
electronics, providing the proper temperature and humidity for top performance.
In addition,
Emerson Network Power will be supplying the reliable power technology to
protect the new supercomputer from costly failures in the event of power surges
or blackouts, with the installation of Liebert UPS (Uninterruptible Power
Supply) systems.
Virginia Tech
researchers will use the new supercomputer to help better understand complex
topics of worldwide significance, including nanoscale
electronics, chemistry, aerodynamics, molecular statics,
and computational acoustics. Srinidhi Varadarajan, the director of the university’s Terascale Supercomputing Facility and the architect of the
cluster, expects the supercomputer to be functioning by Oct. 1.
About Emerson Network Power
Emerson Network Power is an
Emerson business which provides a full spectrum of reliable power solutions,
including inbound power, connectivity, power supplies, power systems and
precision cooling, backed by the largest global services organization in the power
industry. These Emerson companies serve the needs of telecommunications
networks, data centers, health care and industrial facilities worldwide. For
more information, visit www.emersonnetworkpower.com.
About Emerson
St. Louis-based Emerson
(www.gotoemerson.com) is a global leader in bringing technology and engineering
together to provide innovative solutions to customers in electronics and
telecommunications; process control; industrial automation; heating,
ventilating and air conditioning; and appliance and tools. Sales in
fiscal 2002 were $13.8 billion.
About Virginia Tech
From a meager
beginning in October of 1872, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University,
popularly known as Virginia Tech (www.vt.edu)
has evolved into a comprehensive university of national and international
prominence. As Virginia's
largest university with 25,600 students and one of the top 50 research
institutions in the nation, it is an institution that firmly embraces a history
of putting knowledge to work. That tradition is rooted in our motto, Ut Prosim: "That I May
Serve," and our land-grant missions of instruction, research, and solving
the problems of society through public service and outreach activities.