Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Lux Research Releases Top 10 Innovative Companies Profiled in Q2 2013

Promising new emerging technologies for 3D printing, disease-resistant crops, solar-powered oil production, and Alzheimer’s diagnosis highlight Lux Research’s Q2 2013 list


BOSTON, MA – July 2, 2013 – Leading emerging technology research firm Lux Research profiled 420 companies across 18 different emerging technologydomains in the second quarter of 2013 as part of its ongoing intelligence services.  Drawing on the deep domain expertise of its analysts, Lux Research uses primary research to provide detailed information and critical analysis of firms developing emerging technologies that are poised to impact global megatrends like sustainable energy and infrastructure, sustainable health and wellness, and materials revolutions.

Each quarter the Lux Research team of analysts identifies the 10 most compelling companies profiled across all its coverage areas. Each firm gets a “Lux Take” that ranges from “Strong Caution” to “Strong Positive,” to provide a bottom-line assessment of its prospect, with a “Wait and see” rating  for companies that still face too much uncertainty for a definitive call.

The top 10 from Q2 2013 are:

1. Morflora – Wait and see – Agro Innovation
By achieving transgenic-level disease resistance without any genetic modification Morflora sidesteps contentious issues; its current pilot program has Morflora poised to be a part of most major seed treatment products within three to five years.
2. Cognoptix – Wait and see – Bioelectronics
Its point-of-care ocular beta-amyloid aggregate test for early Alzheimer’s diagnosis could help shift medicine towards preventive care, consequently reducing costs and improving outcomes.
3. Arcam – Strong Positive – Advanced Materials
Electron beam melting (EBM) 3D printers offer high-quality metal parts with faster throughput and higher strength than selective laser sintering; it has a unique business model encouraging compatible third-party material powder inputs.
4. GlassPoint Solar – Wait and See – Solar Systems; Exploration & Production
The poster child for solar-powered enhanced oil recovery (EOR) has raised $29 million from investors including Royal Dutch Shell, and has a 7 MW pilot project constructed with PDO in Oman.
5. Iceotope – Positive – Efficient Building Systems
In the high performance computing market, this early-stage company aims to replace traditional air-cooled servers with its novel sealed liquid units, reducing cooling energy by over 50%.
6. Imprint Energy – Positive – Printed, Flexible, and Organic Electronics; Mobile Energy
With its best-in-class thin-film battery technology and a credible path to cost reduction at high volumes, Imprint is working with the U.S. intelligence community on wearable applications.
7. Ascenix Biotechnologies – Wait and See – Bio-Based Materials and Chemicals
A formidable foe against older and larger bio-based chemicals, Ascenix’s route to the important methyl methacrylate doesn’t require propylene or cyanide and could have attractive economics.
8. AlterNRG – Positive – Alternative Fuels
In a space where companies are struggling to finance and build projects, AlterNRG is making sales from its high-temperature plasma gasification to convert a range of waste streams into syngas.
9. Cooledge Lighting – Wait and See – Energy Electronics
Flexible planar LED modules should find attractive applications in the commercial lighting segment; this company offers a twist on planar modules by incorporating the flexibility of OLED lighting using traditional LEDs.
10. Kebony – Positive – Sustainable Building Materials
Rising prices and increased global awareness about protecting tropical forests has led to a significant demand for tropical hardwood replacement.  Kebony is well-positioned to capitalize on these trends with itsfurfuryl-alcohol-modified softwood that has comparable cost/performance to Burmese teak.
About Lux Research
Lux Research provides strategic advice and ongoing intelligence for emerging technologies. Leaders in business, finance and government rely on us to help them make informed strategic decisions. Through our unique research approach focused on primary research and our extensive global network, we deliver insight, connections and competitive advantage to our clients. Visit www.luxresearchinc.com for more information.

Contact:
Carole Jacques
Lux Research, Inc.
617-502-5314

Friday, 21 June 2013

Iceotope plans to revolutionise the traditional data centre

While transferring and re-using heat to power other devices

by Lee Bell


COOL SERVER MAKER Iceotope demonstrated its fully immersed liquid cooled server system to The INQUIRER when we recently visited the University of Leeds where it was first deployed.
Icetope impressed us with its unique technology, which claims to use typically 20 percent less power than traditional server systems. Its business development director Richard Barrington talked us through the firm's plans for revolutionising the traditional data centre.

The system in use at Leeds Uni

Submerged in a non-conductive liquid, so as far as the electronics inside are concerned, the liquid acts like air meaning they can be submerged in it without electrocuting anyone that comes into contact with it. There is no need for fans or moving parts inside the server, as the liquid naturally expands as it takes heat away from the electronics.
"What we're actually doing here is science, not IT," Barrington said. "We're using thermo fluid dynamics, we're using mechanical engineering, advanced fluids, and very bright people to put that all together for this solution."

The rack

Iceotope's submerged server idea came from the principle that a traditional data centre costs as much in power to run it over its lifetime as the hardware itself.
"The research project asked the question, what's the most efficient way of cooling?" Barrington said. "Well, the most efficient way is water, but you can't mix water and electronics because it will conduct electricity and you'd fry everyone within 100 miles. So how do you do it differently?"
Iceotope's server design was therefore based on finding a liquid into which it could submerge the electronics so it uses convection to remove heat from the electronics. It tried and tested 63 different liquids before arriving at the one it settled on, which was 3M's Novec.

The Novec liquid pouring out

"We came up with the idea of encapsulating each individual server so they can be hot swappable," Barrington said. "We wanted to build something that could fit into a standard cabinet because that's what people expect, so when you stack all that together then there was only one real outcome, which is our [submerged server]."
In what would normally be quite an inefficient, fanned and noisy configuration, Iceotope's liquid-cooled server system accepts power at the top, which runs into liquid-cooled power supplies. If you feel inside the rack, it is warm because it is pulling the heat away from the electronics.
The server system claims to be up to 90 percent efficient at capturing heat from the submerged servers, which can then be transferred and reused to heat other devices, such as domestic radiators, at temperatures up to 50 degrees Celsius, thus doubling power savings.

The heat exchange

"Convection moves the heat from the electronics to the servers' cold plate, then a second circuit harvests all of that heat to a heat exchanger and the heat exchangers then transfer the heat to an external state and in this case, it's heating some domestic radiators," Barrington explained.
"If this is a 10KW cabinet, we'll capture 9KW in heat. So there's 1KW lost and we can improve on that as we're not insulating the doors yet, but that's still 75 percent more efficient than air. The heat is coming out in a commercially viable product, hot water that can be re-used."
Icetope claims it can put up to 20KW of computing resources into a traditional sized data centre rack that would normally contain only 4KW to 5KW of computing reasources.
"The decision was to build something that would take industry standard technology such as Supermicro motherboards and standard two-socket systems, and build the infrastructure around it," Barrington said.
The firm also claims it can fit more resource in the same physical space because its server is completely silent.

Size is half of a traditional server

"With no worry for humidity or air quality I can put it next to a desk, it doesn't actually need a data centre," Barrington explained. "And there's no worry about air quality in the surround area [that] the Iceoptope's rack is in. Because it doesn't breathe air you can put it in a really hostile environment and it doesn't care."
The server can't just be used in the colder times of the year. Rather bizarrely, it can also be used to create refrigerated air through 'absorption chilling', that is, taking hot water to generate chilled air, and you can heat your buildings in winter all from the same water source.

The system in Leeds Uni

Iceotope is hoping to show off its server project in a more upscale setting soon, but at the moment it is focusing on generating interest in its systems.
"It is up to exciting people and getting their imaginations fired up for this because, for example, we are now seeing data centres that are 14 to 18 Megawatts as a regular occurrence these days, which is about £14m a year in power on average," Barrington said.
"So if I can take 10 Megawatts off that as heat and do something productive with it, you start to get a scale of what you can do with this."
"The pre-production system now in use at Leeds University is really a demonstrator of what is possible," Barrington added.
Iceotope is experimenting to increase the density in its submergeable server as well as the possibility of liquid cooling switches and storage.

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

PETER HOPTON ANNOUNCED AS NEW ICEOTOPE CEO

Original Iceotope founder to steer company reins through new investment and further product development


Iceotope, the creator of next-generation liquid cooling, today announced that Peter Hopton, the company’s original founder, is to assume the position of CEO starting immediately. Having been operating as Iceotope’s chief technical officer since 2011, Hopton has been instrumental in Iceotope’s commercial and product development, building on the company’s customer base and increasing its profile within the technology industry. It is with these achievements in mind that the Iceotope investors have decided to promote Hopton to CEO. In this capacity he will continue to guide the company through investment and product development, as well as expand upon its rapidly growing commercial opportunities.

As part of this senior management change, Neil Bennett will step into the role of Executive Chairman. Bennett will continue to be involved in the business at a boardroom capacity but will hand over control of the day-to-day running of the business. On Hopton’s appointment, Bennett said “Peter has shown leadership at every level and has the ability to guide this company from both a technical and commercial standpoint. He is the focal point of the technology as well as the board room and is doing a great job. We recognise that he’s been working tirelessly to develop a successful product and business and it is entirely on merit that he takes up this new role.”

Hopton commented on the new position, “I’d like to thank Neil for his commitment to the cause during his spell as CEO and also the investors for putting their full weight behind me. It seems like the IT industry is starting to come around to the idea of liquid cooling and many influential forces within have now recognised the game-changing potential of Iceotope’s technology. We’re growing rapidly as a business but it’s becoming clearer than ever that liquid cooling and Iceotope both have a bright future ahead. I have faith that I can guide the company to its next stage of development and it is a great privilege to be given the opportunity to do so.”

Monday, 20 May 2013

Iceotope shows off fully immersed liquid cooled servers


Uses 20 percent less power than traditional systems

COOL SERVER MAKER Iceotope has demonstrated its fully immersed liquid cooled server system that's in operation at the University of Leeds.
Using a non-conductive liquid, the liquid cooling system has a low dielectric constant such that, as far as the electronics inside are concerned the liquid acts like air, meaning the electronics can be submerged in it.
However, as there are no fans or moving parts needed to pump the liquid around because it naturally expands as it takes heat away from the electronics, Iceotope's server system claims to reduce data centre cooling costs by up 97 percent, power on computing load by 20 percent and overall ICT infrastructure costs by 50 percent when compared to traditional air or water cooling systems.
Iceotope also claims that the server liquid cooling system is up to 90 percent efficient at capturing heat from submerged servers, which can then be transferred and reused to heat other devices like domestic radiators up to 50 degrees Celsius, thus doubling power savings.
Iceotope's submerged servers have already attracted inquiries from many companies interested in using the technology.

By Lee Bell, The Inquirer

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Iceotope Garners Acclaim from Green IT Community!


The month of May sees Iceotope’s green IT credentials celebrated on both the home and international stage as part of a whirlwind week! 


On Thursday night, Iceotope won ‘Cooling Product of the Year’ by popular vote at the UK’s Green IT Awards ceremony and yesterday we accepted the award for ‘Facility Product Deployment’ as part of the Uptime Institute’s Green Enterprise IT Awards in the heart of Silicon Valley.


e-shot 12
The Uptime Institute award recognises
the successful collaboration between
Iceotope, the University of Leeds and
3M in deploying Iceotope's innovative
liquid cooled servers at the University
and the combined efforts of all three
organisations to develop the technology.



The two award wins mark a fitting
testament to Iceotope’s continued
development and we are absolutely
delighted to receive yet more positive
reception for our work in advancing
energy efficiency in IT!




Iceotope Solution at University of Leeds


“The recognition we’re getting from these extremely prestigious industry bodies is absolutely incredible, especially to get so much praise for Iceotope’s work with Leeds, which is of course the company’s first publically announced customer. It is the tech sector’s equivalent of being given an Oscar for your first film!”

Peter Hopton, CEO


GEIT-photo 3
GEIT Awards 2013 Reception, Santa Clara, CA

Monday, 13 May 2013

The wet servers



David Hayward has a look at a new concept in server cooling and chats to the designers








Cooling a significantly sized server room is a challenge in itself. The energy requirements necessary to keep a constant air temperature are quite extraordinary, making the server room a less than green approach to providing adequate cooling. Then there are other aspects to take into consideration, such as humidity control systems, air purification, air conditioning servicing… The list goes on, and quite soon the server room itself has become the single most expensive part of any company’s IT equation.
However, the UK firm Iceotope has an ingenious solution. Led by Dr Jon Summers, from the University of Leeds’ School of Mechanical Engineering, a team of researchers have installed the first production system of servers completely immersed in liquid.
Traditional air cooling has a number of disadvantages when it comes to transferring heat away from a server. For starters it’s very expensive, it’s noisy, it requires more energy and it’s not particularly effective. Whereas liquid is several thousand times more effective at transferring heat, it’s quieter in doing so and requires significantly less energy.
The liquid in question is called 3M Novec, a non-flammable coolant that doesn’t conduct electricity. In fact, it’s so exceptional that Dr Jon Summers said, “The liquid we’re using is extraordinary stuff. You could throw your mobile phone in a tub of it and the phone would work perfectly.”
The server and the liquid cooled system uses a model based on computational fluid dynamics to represent the coolant as it flows through the server, making it an ultra efficient system, designed with a simple low energy pump installed at the bottom of the cabinet, pumping a secondary coolant, which is water, to the top, where it cascades down through all 48 modules of the server thanks to gravity. The secondary coolant then terminates at the heat exchangers within the cabinet for the transfer of heat to a third and final coolant, on an external loop, taking the heat away for external cooling or for reuse.
The high efficiency of this system means that the output water can reach temperatures of up to 50°C, which can then be used for heating rooms and providing hot water. Overall, the Iceotope-designed system uses a mere 80W of power to harvest the heat from up to 20kW of ICT use.
It’s extraordinarily impressive, and because there are no fans or air conditioning units, the server room is considerably quieter and uses an estimated 80 to 97% less energy to keep the equipment at perfect operating temperature.

Interview with Iceotope

We took a moment from Iceotope’s busy schedule to ask the team a few questions regarding this revolutionary liquid cooled system:
Can you tell us a bit more about the Iceotope company? When did it start? What are its objectives and goals?
Founded in 2011 with acquired IP dating back to 2005, Sheffield-based start-up Iceotope has designed and engineered an innovative liquid cooling system that solves some of the most pressing challenges facing today’s data centre operators. The technology has the potential to halve the energy usage of the data centre industry, prevent millions of tons of CO2 being released into the atmosphere and reduce the spiralling costs of running a data centre facility. Iceotope ultimately aims to offer 24/7 ‘free cooling’ anywhere in the world, including equatorial and desert regions.
Was all the R&D work conducted here in the UK, through and in conjunction with various universities?
Iceotope is the culmination of a five-year, UK-based R&D effort. The company has worked in partnership with various universities to include the University of Sheffield, Sheffield Hallam and most recently the University of Leeds. The current system is also backed by industry leaders such as 3M and AMD.
How easy would it be for a company to implement the Iceotope Liquid Cooling Server solution into its own organisation?
By negating the need for air handling, chilling and humidity control equipment at the server, rack or building level, the Iceotope Solution can be located almost anywhere with access to power and water, including industrial space or populated areas. By negating fans from the equation, the Iceotope Solution is completely silent in operation, meaning that servers can now be located in environments that were previously considered unsuitable for data centre use.
How do the setup costs of the Iceotope system compare with that of a traditional machine room, air con setup?
By removing the need for specialised data centre design, the Iceotope Solution slashes CAPEX and OPEX in equal measure. Traditional ‘air cooled’ data centre facilities require extensive and expensive infrastructure, sometimes resulting in 2/3 of the overall design. Such facilities also require much more physical space for ventilation (hot and cold aisles). The Iceotope Solution can be configured as a single supercomputer, multiple server racks or scaled out to create entire data centres, offering new builds and retrofits more building and more space for their money.
Would there be any advantage to implementing this system at the desktop level? For overclocking, perhaps?
Possibly, but our core market interest is not desktops at the moment. Overclocking aims to keep desktop computers running cool, whereas the Iceotope Solution aims to run server rooms neutral in terms of heat thus allowing for optimal processing power. We might look at designing a desktop product further down the line.
Which companies have so far used this technology?
The first production system was installed at the University of Leeds in January. We are in the process of installing a second system in Poland, buyer to be announced and bidding for a third requirement within the UK. We have a strong sales pipeline for 2013 and into 2014.
What happens if the systems fail? Is there a fan-based backup that kicks in?
There is no fan-based backup; the cooling systems are fault tolerant and fully redundant. They can also tolerate prolonged outages due to the thermal latency in the system.
Aside from reducing cooling costs by 97%, what other ‘green’ benefits are there to be had from this system? Are the materials used manufactured in a ‘green’ way, and can they themselves be recycled?
In addition to reducing cooling costs by 97%, the Iceotope Solution reduces ICT power load by 20% and overall ICT infrastructure costs by 50%. The technology can also help reduce associated CO2 emissions - something that the data centre industry is going to have to address soon, since it has been estimated to be on par with that of the airline industry in the years to come.
The Iceotope Solution also delivers high-grade heated exhaust water, which can be reused to heat buildings or for other applications - another very valuable ‘green’ benefit that is unique to Iceotope.
Our patented products are designed ‘cradle to cradle’ ensuring that all core components can be recovered and reused many times and all of our products are also designed, engineered and manufactured locally within the UK, and that’s something we are very proud of.
How do you see the future of data centre and server room cooling evolving? What projects do you have in line for future Iceotope systems?
We believe that most data centres will be liquid cooled in the future, the reason being that liquid is thousands of times more effective at transferring heat than air, and the cooling aspect of such facilities is the single largest contributor to inefficiency.
If you purchase a car today, the first thing you think about is running costs (fuel efficiency). Although the data centre industry is enjoying double digit growth year on year, it’s suffering from many pain points that liquid cooling can solve, such as running costs (cooling efficiency).
We’re finding in real customers that flexibility and adaptability are key buying motives, funded by energy savings. The fact that the Iceotope Solution does not even need a data centre environment, combined with the fact that it unifies servers and infrastructure into a single simple yet elegant solution makes the choice for many to switch from traditional air cooling to next-generation liquid cooling a simple and sensible one.

Conclusion

The world of server room cooling is on the verge of something very big. Wth the Iceotope system in effect, imagine the global implications to the carbon footprint. The future is certainly looking impressive, but there are still hurdles to overcome, chiefly the acceptance of a new innovative system.
However, those involved are confident that Iceotope’s system of cooling is the future; as Peter Hopton, Iceotope’s chief technology officer and originator of the Iceotope concept, said, “More than five years of research, innovation and collaboration have gone into Iceotope’s technology. The basic principle of the design has many applications and, while a few years away, there is no reason why every home shouldn’t make better use of the surplus heat from consumer electronics. Imagine having your PC or TV plumbed into the central heating system.”
In a world where the internet and cloud services will grow to unimaginable proportions and data centres become the equivalent of small towns in size, we as users have to take responsibility for the impact our daily lives have on the environment, and the Iceotope concept may very well be the saving grace and a positive outlook for a more green IT future. 

Key facts about data centres

  • The world’s data centres use 31 gigawatts of power - more than seven times the capacity of the UK’s largest coal-fired power station, Drax in North Yorkshire.
  • Data centre carbon emissions are projected to quadruple between 2008 and 2020.
  • The UK has 7.6 million square metres of data centre floor space.
  • One in three of the world’s population use data centres. The number is growing at around 15% annually.