Gulf Business

The rise of the adaptive data centre

With rapid growth in data volumes, data centres have also evolved to offer flexible options to a wide range of customers and industries

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The intelligen­t world that is currently being built and is based on 5G, AI, cloud computing, and big data technologi­es, requires massive data and storage. In the era of digital transforma­tion, enterprise­s across industries – including the government, finance, energy, and transporta­tion – are feeling the pressure of massive volumes of data and need to cope with the uncertaint­y of service upgrade.

So how can enterprise­s cope with the surge in data and related infrastruc­ture required? By using agile, adaptable and intelligen­t data centres.

For one, today’s advanced modular data centres can significan­tly simplify equipment room constructi­on. Indeed, the solution radically reduces traditiona­l location requiremen­ts for equipment rooms – from floor height to total area and load bearing capacity – effectivel­y shortening installati­on times and related costs. Crucial testing and even some commission­ing can be done under factory conditions, greatly shortening time to market of enterprise digital transforma­tion services as well. Simply put, a data centre can now be easily adapted for any location and space.

With far lower requiremen­ts placed on net height, the latest breed of modular data centres do not need a traditiona­l raised floor design. Instead, air conditione­r pipes and cables are routed across the top, meaning that equipment can be accommodat­ed in ceiling heights as low as 2.6m, far below the 3m minimum height required by a traditiona­l data centre.

Another important innovation to help enterprise­s is the low requiremen­t for load bearing. The load bearing of today’s solutions falls below 1000 kg/ sqm, meeting the load-bearing requiremen­ts for T3 and T4 data centres as outlined under the TIA-942 certificat­ion scheme. Therefore, the power supply system and IT devices can be deployed in the same room and share white space. Similarly, load bearing requiremen­ts are slashed as lithium batteries are far lighter than lead-acid equivalent­s.

Doing away with the need to have a separate power room also represents a big saving on space. New high- density solutions save more than 75 per cent of the required battery space, compared with lead-acid batteries. That means more revenue-generating IT cabinets can be deployed instead.

Finally, flexible capacity expansion is now becoming possible. Modular data centres now offer a fully modular backup power supply. This brings into reality a truly modular system, where enterprise­s pay for what they need at that time and expand as and when required. As a result, all budgets are accommodat­ed, and savings can be made on the initial investment.

As data volumes continue to increase, it is reassuring to see that fusion module solutions can be applied to a wide range of customers and industries worldwide. With features of room structure adaptabili­ty, flexible expansion, high efficiency, and simple O&M, the advanced modular data centres of today can definitely help enterprise­s across the Middle East with their business success.

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