Analyst: Data center rack densities remain below 5 kW

Oct. 3, 2016
In IHS Markit’s examination of rack PDUs, it finds that higher-power PDUs are gaining market share but actual data center rack densities are low thanks to virtualization and other efficiencies.
In its most recent analysis of the rack PDU market, IHS Markit found that the uptake of higher-power rack PDUs strongly outpaces the actual power density within racks in the data center. Sarah McElroy, senior research analyst for data centers and cloud with IHS Markit, pointed out, “Rack PDUs with higher power ratings, in the 5-10 kW range, accounted for 41 percent of global rack PDU revenue in 2015 compared to 38 percent in 2013, proving that a shift is occurring. While 5-10 kW rack PDUs are growing in popularity over those <5 kW, their growth is slightly limited by movement toward even higher power ratings. Rack PDUs with the highest power ratings, >10 kW, accounted for 18 percent of global rack PDU revenue in 2013 and grew to account for 22 percent by 2015.”

McElroy then proverbially dropped the other shoe: “Despite the growth in rack PDUs with higher power ratings, IHS finds that average rack power densities are not as high as the rack PDU power rating data might suggest. IHS estimates that average rack power density globally is approaching but remains below 5 kW per rack.”
She detailed the following factors that have caused power density per rack to rise more slowly than they were expected to 5 to 10 years ago.

Advances in the energy efficiency of power supplies and IT equipment has increased the achievable compute per watt.

The emergence of low-power servers such as Atom processor-based units designed to have low power draw are increasingly used for less-power-intensive tasks like data storage.

Server virtualization allows users to run servers at higher capacity, for example 80 percent instead of 20 percent capacity. Instead of adding additional servers, users are now running current servers closer to full capacity, which generally results in less power draw than adding new servers to perform the same amount of computing.

McElroy also drew attention to environments in which data center rack densities have risen: “While average rack densities still remain below 5 kW worldwide, densities of up to almost 50 kW have been implemented in applications such as supercomputing. It’s no longer uncommon to see rack densities of 20 to 30 kW in some applications. Average rack power densities will continue to rise in the next five years as a result of the increased number of servers that can fit in one rack as well as increases in rack heights. However, it will likely take a few years for actual rack power densities to catch up with power ratings on rack PDUs that end users are purchasing.”

You can find out more from senior research analyst Sarah McElroy and IHS Markit about data center rack densities and other technologies here.

Sponsored Recommendations

Power up your system integration with Pulse Power - the game-changing power delivery system

May 10, 2023
Pulse Power is a novel power delivery system that allows System Integrators to safely provide significant power, over long distances, to remote equipment. It is a Class 4 power...

The Agile and Efficient Digital Building

May 9, 2023
This ebook explores how intelligent building solutions can help businesses improve network infrastructure management and optimize data center operations in enterprise buildings...

400G in the Data Center

Aug. 3, 2022
WHATS NEXT FOR THE DATA CENTER: 400G and Beyond

Network Monitoring- Why Tap Modules?

May 1, 2023
EDGE™ and EDGE8® tap modules enable passive optical tapping of the network while reducing downtime and link loss and increasing rack space utilization and density. Unlike other...