now run that unshielded wire 50 meters past racks of GPUs and enjoy your EMI
> The 400Hz distribution industry is massive; the entire aerospace industry runs on it
nothing in that catalog is rated for 100kW–1MW rack loads at 800Vrms
> 3 phase @ 400Hz is x6 = 2.4kHz... Your PSU is now 14 diodes and a ceramic cap
you still need an inverter-based UPS upstream, which is the exact conversion stage DC eliminates
> large voltage/current DC breakers are.. gnarly, and expensive. DC does not like to stop flowing
SiC solid-state DC breakers are shipping today from every major vendor
> DC-DC converters are great, but you're not going to beat a transformer in efficiency or reliability
wide-bandgap converters are at 95%+ with no moving parts
Multipole expansion scales faster than r^2.
Also, im not in the field (clearly) but GPUs cant handle 2.4 kHz? The quarter wavelength is 30km.
"nothing in that catalog is rated for 100kW–1MW rack loads at 800Vrms"
Current wise, the catalog covers this track just fine. As to the voltages, well that's the whole point of AC! The voltage you need is but a few loops of wire away.
"you still need an inverter-based UPS upstream, which is the exact conversion stage DC eliminates"
So keep it? To clarify, this is the "we're too good for plebeian power, so we'll transform it AC->DC->AC", right?
"SiC solid-state DC breakers are shipping today from every major vendor"
Of course they do. They're also pricey, have limited current capability (both capital costs and therefore irrelevant when the industry is awash with GCC money) and lower conduction, and therefore higher heat.
They're really nice though.
"wide-bandgap converters are at 95%+ with no moving parts"
transformers have no moving parts. Loaded they can do 97%+ efficiency, or 2MW of heat eliminated on a 100MW center.
The skin depth by the way is sqrt(2 1.7e-8 ohm m / (2 pi 400Hz mu0))=~3mm for copper---OK for single rack, but starts to be significant for the type of bus bars that an aisle of racks might want.
As for efficiency, both 400Hz transformers AND fancy DC-DC converters are around 95% efficient, except that AC requires electronics to rectify it to DC, losing another few percent, so the slight advantage goes to DC, actually.
As for merging power, remember that DC DC converter uses an internal AC stage, so it's the same---you can have multiple primary windings, just like for plain AC.
I am a recovering audiophool.
I do own a pair of 2m long Monster Cable speaker cables (with locking gold plated banana plugs). I am fairly certain I've used welders with smaller cables.
(In my defence, I bought those as a teenager in the late 80s. I am not so easily marketed to with snake oil these days. I hope.)
(On the other hand, I really like the idea of a reliably stable plus and minus 70V or maybe 100V DC power supply to my house. That'd make audio power amplifiers much easier and lighter...)
What are you talking about? There's a very significant skin effect at 400Hz. Skin effect goes up with frequency. These datacenters use copper busbars, not cable, so skin effect is an important consideration.
You obviously need at least a dozen stands in parallel!!
Clearly skin effect scales with frequency but, 400 Hz is still low, only 2.5x lines frequency (the scale is by the root); so the skin depth is 3mm. 3mm on each side makes for a pretty hefty rectangular cross-section.
I'm pretty sure you have my delivery address from when I bought sorted Lego from you about 10 years back.
Let me know when to expect the 100,000Amp test equipment!
I shall make sure I wear better PPE than just my reading glasses.
:-)
Ah, that lego project... that was one I always wondered if I should have industrialized it but sourcing enough lego was a real problem.
That's low voltage lightning :)