Siemens and Rittal have entered a strategic partnership to jointly develop solutions for more efficient data center power distribution in the IEC market. The standardized infrastructure is intended to accelerate the construction of high- performance data centers, minimize time-to-compute, and address the rapidly increasing power densities of AI applications.

Hot to Win the Challenge of a 1 MW per Rack? The Rittal and Siemens Shared Vision

In AI data centers, power densities exceeding 100 kW per rack have become the norm. By 2030, the power density could increase to more than 1 MW. This requires innovative architecture for power distribution, cooling, and heat recovery. To address this, Siemens Smart Infrastructure is partnering with Friedhelm Loh Group and its largest company Rittal, a global supplier of racks and standardized infrastructure, including power and cooling for leading hyperscalers.

We have a long-standing collaboration with Siemens in a number of fields. We are proud to be taking our partnership to the next level,” said Friedhelm Loh, owner and CEO of the Friedhelm Loh Group. “Both companies are driven by the desire to innovate. As technology leaders, we have a responsibility to keep strengthening our customers’ competitiveness with the latest technologies.” One of the first joint solutions will be a “sidecar” application that is housed directly in the white space of a data center, where the server cabinets and data storage are located.

By bundling the power electronics in a dedicated power rack that supplies the server racks, this type of power supply represents a breakthrough for future AI applications. It provides computing units with a fast, simple, standardized, and scalable supply of power. OCP standards and the modular solution with tested technology from Rittal and Siemens ensure fast deployment, high availability, reliable operation, and maximized tokens-per- watt. These are the prerequisites for quickly bringing these relevant technologies to the digital economy.

AI-optimized infrastructure 

“To enable the rapid growth of AI, we need smart, reliable, and scalable power supply solutions for data centers and we need them quickly. In combination with our innovative electrical products and solutions, Rittal is an ideal partner when it comes to speed and standardization in infrastructure,” said Andreas Matthé, CEO Electrical Products at Siemens Smart Infrastructure.

Other Siemens and Rittal projects include the development of a standardized low-voltage distribution system for modular and containerized data centers as well as optimized solutions for operational and personal safety. The first customer projects are already underway.

Highlights

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