Since 2020, Meta’s hyperscale data center — spanning 50,000 square meters on an industrial estate on the edge of the city — has been pushing warm air generated by its servers into the district heating network under Odense. That heat is then dispersed through 100,000 households hooked up to the system, with Meta providing enough heat to cover roughly 11,000.

  • @TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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    111 months ago

    Modern heat pump systems are reversible, so you would be drawing the heat energy from the room and releasing it outside. During this exchange air is run over a compressed coolant which cools the air and reintroduces it back to the room.

      • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        111 months ago

        An AC can only cool the home, while a heat pump can both cool and heat a home. They are different things, and worth looking into.

        • @bitwaba@lemmy.world
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          211 months ago

          During this exchange air is run over a compressed coolant which cools the air and reintroduces it back to the room

          That’s just an air conditioner. The difference between an air conditoner and a heat pump is that a heat pump has a reversal valve that allows the refrigerant to run backwards through the system.

          My point is someone is using a whole bunch of words to say “I’d air-condition my server room”. It’s not exactly a ground breaking idea.

    • @Crozekiel@lemmy.zip
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      110 months ago

      A heat pump still costs energy to run… And running it in reverse to cool a room is the exact same process as running an ac to cool a room. It’s all phase change cooling which we’ve been doing for decades. The only possible innovation that could be had here is using the waste heat instead of just releasing it to the outside environment, but that requires wanting to heat something else while you need to cool the server room.