Fire prevention in the datacenter

Fire is one of the main enemies of a datacenter. Because of the large density of equipment and cables, a short circuit in a cable or a defect in the equipment can easily lead to fire. And because of the air flow in the datacenter and the frequent use of raised floors fires can spread around very quickly.

Even if a fire starts outside of the datacenter’s computer room, the smoke of such a fire could damage equipment in the datacenter. I know of occasions where the fire was not in the computer room, but in an office. The smoke was not entering the datacenter at all, but the fire fighters demanded to have the power of the entire building (including the datacenter’s UPS) shut down before they could start extinguishing the fire.

Smoke should be taken seriously as well. Even if there is no fire breakout, smoke exposure alone can cause extensive damage to the electronic equipment within the data center. A report by the FCI states that less than 5% of fire damage results from direct thermal damage, while the rest is contributed to non-thermal reasons such as smoke and the inherent gases in it.

Suppressing fire in the datacenter consists of four levels:

  • Fire prevention – measures to avoid a fire in the first place
  • Passive fire protection – measures to limit the exposure of the fire once it has started
  • Fire detection systems – systems to detect smoke and fire
  • Fire suppression systems – systems to extinguish the fire once it is detected

Each of the levels above should be taken care of. They are described below.

Fire prevention

The best way to avoid fire damage is to ensure fires do not start at all. Respecting regulations and implementing fire prevention guidelines is of course a good measure. In datacenters the most common source of fires is overheating of equipment or cables. Avoiding “cable spaghetti” is a very useful step in fire prevention, as is not overloading the power supply connections.

Passive fire protection

Passive fire protection limits the exposure of fire once it has started. Measures include the installation of fire resistant walls, floors and ceilings to keep the fire from spreading fast and firewalls around parts of the datacenter to restrict the fire to a certain datacenter compartment.

Be aware of vulnerable entry points, such as cable penetrations, coolant tube penetrations and air ducts. These entry points should be filled with fire resistant material.

Fire detection systems

Fire detection systems allow investigation, interruption of power, and manual fire suppression before the fire grows to a large size. Smoke detectors, flame detectors and heat detectors are usually installed to provide early warning of a developing fire.

Installation of these detectors is a delicate task, as the air flow of the datacenter’s cooling systems must be considered. Early warning signs should enable staff to investigate the alarm and if possible stop the fire using for instance hand fire extinguishers, or simply shutting off the power to overheated equipment.

Fire suppression systems

Fire needs three components: heat, fuel and oxygen. If any of these three lack, a fire will stop. So in general there are three ways to stop a fire:

  • Reduction or isolation of fuel
  • Reduction of heat
  • Reduction or isolation of oxygen

Putting out a fire by reducing heat using water (as used by sprinkler systems or firemen) is not preferred in a datacenter. The damage created by the water might be worse than the fire itself. Therefore in the early days of datacenters fire extinguishing was mostly done using Halon gas, reducing the oxygen the fire needs. Halon extinguishes fire without damaging electronic equipment by replacing the oxygen in normal air with inflammable Halon gas. However Halon is bad for people, as it causes dizziness - not a good combination with a spreading fire.

Today gas based extinction systems are still in use, but they use mostly other types of inert gases, like Argon and special patented gas types (usually combinations of Argon and for instance Nitrogen in a special mix). They have all the benefits of Halon but none of its disadvantages.

Because releasing fire suppression gas in the datacenter increases the pressure in the datacenter with some 50% in a very short time, the pressure peak can break windows, or hurt people. This means that proper vents must be installed when gas based fire extinguishing is used.


This entry was posted on Zondag 09 Oktober 2011

Earlier articles

Quantum computing

My Book

Security bij cloudproviders wordt niet beter door overheidsregulering

Passend Europees cloudinitiatief nog ver weg

Data Nederlandse studenten in cloud niet grootschalig toegankelijk voor bedrijven VS

VS kan nog steeds Europese data Microsoft opeisen ondanks nieuwe regels

The cloud is as insecure as its configuration

Infrastructure as code

DevOps for infrastructure

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

(Hyper) Converged Infrastructure

Object storage

Software Defined Networking (SDN) and Network Function Virtualization (NFV)

Software Defined Storage (SDS)

What's the point of using Docker containers?

Identity and Access Management

Using user profiles to determine infrastructure load

Public wireless networks

Supercomputer architecture

Desktop virtualization

Stakeholder management

x86 platform architecture

Midrange systems architecture

Mainframe Architecture

Software Defined Data Center - SDDC

The Virtualization Model

What are concurrent users?

Performance and availability monitoring in levels

UX/UI has no business rules

Technical debt: a time related issue

Solution shaping workshops

Architecture life cycle

Project managers and architects

Using ArchiMate for describing infrastructures

Kruchten’s 4+1 views for solution architecture

The SEI stack of solution architecture frameworks

TOGAF and infrastructure architecture

The Zachman framework

An introduction to architecture frameworks

How to handle a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack

Architecture Principles

Views and viewpoints explained

Stakeholders and their concerns

Skills of a solution architect architect

Solution architects versus enterprise architects

Definition of IT Architecture

What is Big Data?

How to make your IT "Greener"

What is Cloud computing and IaaS?

Purchasing of IT infrastructure technologies and services

IDS/IPS systems

IP Protocol (IPv4) classes and subnets

Introduction to Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)

IT Infrastructure Architecture model

Fire prevention in the datacenter

Where to build your datacenter

Availability - Fall-back, hot site, warm site

Reliabilty of infrastructure components

Human factors in availability of systems

Business Continuity Management (BCM) and Disaster Recovery Plan (DRP)

Performance - Design for use

Performance concepts - Load balancing

Performance concepts - Scaling

Performance concept - Caching

Perceived performance

Ethical hacking

Computer crime

Introduction to Cryptography

Introduction to Risk management

The history of UNIX and Linux

The history of Microsoft Windows

Engelse woorden in het Nederlands

Infosecurity beurs 2010

The history of Storage

The history of Networking

The first computers

Cloud: waar staat mijn data?

Tips voor het behalen van uw ITAC / Open CA certificaat

Ervaringen met het bestuderen van TOGAF

De beveiliging van uw data in de cloud

Proof of concept

Een consistente back-up? Nergens voor nodig.

Measuring Enterprise Architecture Maturity

The Long Tail

Open group ITAC /Open CA Certification

Human factors in security

Google outage

SAS 70

De Mythe van de Man-Maand

TOGAF 9 - wat is veranderd?

Landelijk Architectuur Congres LAC 2008

InfoSecurity beurs 2008

Spam is big business

De zeven eigenschappen van effectief leiderschap

Een ontmoeting met John Zachman

Persoonlijk Informatie Eigendom

Archivering data - more than backup

Sjaak Laan


Recommended links

Genootschap voor Informatie Architecten
Ruth Malan
Gaudi site
XR Magazine
Esther Barthel's site on virtualization
Eltjo Poort's site on architecture


Feeds

 
XML: RSS Feed 
XML: Atom Feed 


Disclaimer

The postings on this site are my opinions and do not necessarily represent CGI’s strategies, views or opinions.

 

Copyright Sjaak Laan