Title: Introduction to Data Centre Design
1Introduction toData Centre Design
Barry Elliott
BSc RCDD MBA CEng
Earthing, grounding and bonding
2Earthing whats the point
- Safety from electrical hazards
- Reliable signal reference within the entire
information technology installation - Satisfactory electromagnetic performance of the
entire information technology installation
3Applicable Standards
- UK
- BS 6701 Telecommunication cabling and equipment
installations - BS 7671 Requirements for electrical
installations IEE wiring regulations 16th
Edition - Europe
- EN 50310 Application of equipotential bonding
and earthing in buildings with information
technology equipment - EN 50174-2 Information technology Cabling
installation Part 2 installation and planning
practices inside buildings
4Applicable Standards
- World
- IEC 60364-1 Electrical installations of
buildings, various sections including Part
5-548 Earthing arrangements and equipotential
bonding for information technology equipment - ISO 118012002 Information technology cabling
for customer premises - USA
- ANSI/TIA/EIA-J-STD-607 Commercial building
grounding and bonding requirements for
telecommunications - IEEE STD 1100-2005 Powering and Grounding
Sensitive Electronic Equipment
5Applicable Standards and.
- ETS 300 253 Equipment engineering earthing
and bonding of telecommunications equipment in
telecommunication centres - ITU-T K.27 Bonding configurations and earthing
inside a telecommunications building - ITU-T K.31 Bonding configurations and earthing of
telecommunications installations inside a
subscribers building
6Terminology
- Earthing
- The connection of the exposed conductive parts of
an installation to the main earthing terminal of
that installation (BS 7671) - Equipotential bonding
- The electrical connection putting various exposed
conductive parts and extraneous conductive parts
at a substantially equal potential (EN 50174-2) - Grounding (American)
- A conducting connection, whether intentional or
accidental, between an electrical circuit and the
earth. (TIA/EIA-607)
7Bolting it all together the equipotential
bonding system
- In an installation, main equipotential bonding
conductors shall connect to the main earthing
terminal extraneous conductive parts of that
installation including the following - Water service pipes
- Gas service pipes
- Other service pipes and ducting
- Central heating and air conditioning systems
- Exposed metallic structural parts of the building
- The lightning protective system
- The metallic sheath of any telecommunications
cable
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9EN 50310 Application of equipotential bonding
and earthing in buildings with information
technology equipment
10The frame ground grid shall be installed with a
maximum cell size of 2 metres in each horizontal
direction. The minimum cross-sectional area of
the conductors that create the frame ground grid
shall be 10 mm² min. The frame ground grid shall
be connected to the earthing network at multiple
points, where available. If the raised floor is
installed with a surface that is intended to
provide protection against electrostatic
discharge, the DC resistance between the raised
floor surface and the earthing grid shall be in
the range 1 MO to 10 MO
EN 50310
11TIA 607
126.3 mm thick 101 mm high
13Examples of Clean Earth Bar
14Earth everything!
15Earth everything!
16Additionally, every sixth metallic raised floor
pedestal needs to be bonded (to the SRG). This
helps to bleed off static charges built up from
the raised floor system. EN 50174-2 suggest
every 2 or 3 pedestals earthed with a 10 sq mm
wire
17Earthing system for computer room and entrance
room
18Underfloor TGB serving a row of racks
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20TGB in Entrance Room
21Signal Reference Grid - Purpose
22Signal reference grid
- G.5.1.6 TIA 942 Data center grounding
infrastructure. - IEEE Standard 1100 provides recommendations for
the electrical design of bonding and grounding.
Consideration should be given to installing a
common bonding network (CBN) such as a signal
reference structure as described in IEEE Standard
1100 for the bonding of telecommunications and
computer equipment. - If the system is on raised flooring, use a
2-foot x 2-foot (61-cm x 61-cm) grounding grid.
(HP) Site preparation guide
23SRG - Do we need one?
- Access (raised) flooring systems that utilize
bolted stringer construction can be used to
provide a simple SRG. Floor systems that have
either no stringer or snap-in stringers do not
provide for an effective SRG, and other methods
for installing an SRG should be used. (IBM) - system reference potential plane (SRPP)
conductive solid plane, as an ideal goal in
potential equalising, is approached in practice
by horizontal or vertical meshes. The mesh width
thereof is adapted to the frequency range to be
considered. Horizontal and vertical meshes may be
interconnected to form a grid structure
approximating to a Faraday cage, EN 50310
24- The high operating frequencies of modern computer
equipment require that computer room products be
supported both by a good equipment-grounding
system and an effective signal reference grid.
Compaq/HP - A signal reference grid should be designed for
the computer room. This provides an equal
potential plane of reference over a broad band of
frequencies through the use of a network of
low-impedance conductors installed throughout the
facility. SUN
25ETSI EN 300 253
- 4.2 Signal reference
- Reliable signal reference shall be provided by a
SRPP dedicated at least to a functional unit or a
system block. To avoid undue functional
distortion or risk of component failure, the SRPP
shall provide sufficiently low impedance up to
the highest frequency to be regarded by using a
metal plane or a meshed configuration having
adequate mesh dimensions, e.g. a bonding mat. The
frequency band to be covered shall include the
spectral components of transients caused by
switching, short circuits and atmospheric
discharges.
26- Critical equipment should be located and bonded
to the SRG at more than 6 feet away from the
building steel or other potential lightning
paths. - All interconnecting communications, data and
power cables should lay on or very close to the
SRG - Bond the signal reference grid to each piece of
electronic equipment and to any other electrical
or mechanical equipment located on the signal
reference grid. - Bonding connections to the signal reference grid
should be as short as practical with no sharp
folds or bends. Flexible straps are preferred to
the use of round conductors.
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29IEEE 1100