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Author Topic: can anyone explain evaporative cooling system  (Read 3511 times)
jeppe (OP)
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November 08, 2014, 05:04:06 PM
 #1

hi,
so im thinking about designing a new bitcoin shed for my farm as a project.
i have fell across this farm: http://www.thecoinsman.com/2014/08/bitcoin/inside-one-worlds-largest-bitcoin-mines/
and they are using a evaporative cooling system to cool there miners and i thought it was a cool idea however had some doubts.

The writer describes it as "durable paper product that looks like the wavy corrugated part on the inside of cardboard. Water is pumped to the top and flows down, and the fans blowing outwards on the other side create negative air pressure, drawing fresh air through the holes and cooling it." however i don't understand how they do it with all the moisture coming into the farm at night and from the system itself wouldn't  it damage the miners? how do the keep the moisture away from the rigs? Can  Lips sealed explain this cooling system in more detail?
Thanks,
Jeppe
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wh00per
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November 08, 2014, 05:05:36 PM
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try this >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporative_cooler  It's pretty easy ..

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jeppe (OP)
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November 08, 2014, 05:40:36 PM
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But how do they keep the moisture/humidity out from damaging the equipment??
dogie
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November 08, 2014, 06:20:10 PM
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But how do they keep the moisture/humidity out from damaging the equipment??

<95% humidity isn't a danger to electronics, its only when you start getting fully saturated air that it begins to deposit droplets everywhere.

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November 08, 2014, 11:30:03 PM
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But how do they keep the moisture/humidity out from damaging the equipment??

hot surfaces = evaporation.
cold surfaces = condensation
miners and heatsinks are hot surfaces, so theres no water on them to cause shorts

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JessicaSe
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November 08, 2014, 11:41:05 PM
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Can anybody explain what is the different between evaporative cooling system as compare to water cooler fan?
bee7
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November 09, 2014, 12:14:57 AM
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This reading might be interesting: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=313087.0
aosmith
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November 09, 2014, 01:13:07 AM
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Evaporative cooling relies on the amount of energy it takes to excite water from a liquid to a gaseous state.  If you increase the humidity by say, 10% that means you are actively moving water into a gaseous state.  This transition from liquid to gas requires energy, which lowers the temperature of the air.

Photon939
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November 09, 2014, 02:32:42 AM
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Can anybody explain what is the different between evaporative cooling system as compare to water cooler fan?

Common PC water cooling systems use a metal radiator to dissipate heat into the air, it's the same as a normal heatsink but you're using water to move the heat away from the source instead metal conduction directly to the dissipation surface.


Evaporative cooling makes use of the fact that it takes something like 970BTU to evaporate 1lb of water. If you have a large surface area covered with water and blow a fan over it, you get sensible temperature reduction from the energy taken to evaporate some of the water. It's much more efficient than a normal air conditioner but they don't get used much for air conditioning normally because it dumps a crapload of humidity in the air. Miners don't care so it can be an advantage.

Also evaporative cooling effectiveness is inversely proportional to the humidity of the outside air. If it's already humid as shit outside, you don't get much gain with an evaporative cooler. In the desert, they work great
Medow
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November 09, 2014, 09:06:22 AM
 #10

We use evaporative cooling on our house , and it use much less power around .75 kw per unit.

And as aosmith said, if you have dry air you gain more cooling power.

The evaporative cooling system used on that mining farm , is consist of two part the durable paper with continuous water above it and behind it there is a fan that suck the cold air come through that paper.
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November 09, 2014, 09:33:09 AM
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swamp cooler
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November 10, 2014, 04:02:52 AM
 #12

But how do they keep the moisture/humidity out from damaging the equipment??

<95% humidity isn't a danger to electronics, its only when you start getting fully saturated air that it begins to deposit droplets everywhere.

Which caused some problems at Facebook a few years ago.

http://www.opencompute.org/blog/learning-lessons-at-the-prineville-data-center/

Automated systems, or simple weather changes on the outside (temperature during day and night, weather moving through) etc can cause problems, especially for power supplies.

The Chinese farms have these problems on the large scale, along with dirt and pollution. But of course difficult (for them) to tell if it's just crap quality of components or simple physics at work.
BTCish
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November 10, 2014, 05:15:40 AM
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Evaporative cooling relies on the amount of energy it takes to excite water from a liquid to a gaseous state.  If you increase the humidity by say, 10% that means you are actively moving water into a gaseous state.  This transition from liquid to gas requires energy, which lowers the temperature of the air.



Thanks, this explains it pretty good.

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November 14, 2014, 10:05:01 AM
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November 14, 2014, 10:15:36 AM
 #15

Don't bother with evaporative cooling unless you live in an extremely dry environment. It is a very efficient method of cooling only if you don't have high humidity. Otherwise it just raises humidity levels without adding any significant cooling effect.

I was very surprised to see evaporative cooling used in that private data center in Thailand that burned down. How did they think that would help with cooling at all?
Medow
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November 15, 2014, 01:29:24 PM
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Don't bother with evaporative cooling unless you live in an extremely dry environment. It is a very efficient method of cooling only if you don't have high humidity. Otherwise it just raises humidity levels without adding any significant cooling effect.

I was very surprised to see evaporative cooling used in that private data center in Thailand that burned down. How did they think that would help with cooling at all?

It is because it was very cheap and it didn't take much electricity , and i think they may life in a dry area.
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