학술논문

Jointly Managing Electrical and Thermal Energy in Solar- and Battery-powered Computer Systems
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
In The 14th ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems (e-Energy '23), June 20-23, 2023, Orlando, FL, USA. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 12 pages
Subject
Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
Computer Science - Computers and Society
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control
Language
Abstract
Environmentally-powered computer systems operate on renewable energy harvested from their environment, such as solar or wind, and stored in batteries. While harvesting environmental energy has long been necessary for small-scale embedded systems without access to external power sources, it is also increasingly important in designing sustainable larger-scale systems for edge applications. For sustained operations, such systems must consider not only the electrical energy but also the thermal energy available in the environment in their design and operation. Unfortunately, prior work generally ignores the impact of thermal effects, and instead implicitly assumes ideal temperatures. To address the problem, we develop a thermodynamic model that captures the interplay of electrical and thermal energy in environmentally-powered computer systems. The model captures the effect of environmental conditions, the system's physical properties, and workload scheduling on performance. In evaluating our model, we distill the thermal effects that impact these systems using a small-scale prototype and a programmable incubator. We then leverage our model to show how considering these thermal effects in designing and operating environmentally-powered computer systems of varying scales can improve their energy-efficiency, performance, and availability.
Comment: The 14th ACM International Conference on Future Energy Systems (e-Energy '23), June 20--23, 2023, Orlando, FL, USA