There will be a movement on social media towards serif fonts as more and more people named Al get annoyed with their name looking like the acronym AI
@kyrib
engineering professor @ University of Colorado power systems optimization AND power lifting "energy as a personality" -my wife <3 cats, playing guitar/bass/drums, rock/metal, fitness, video games, taking stuff apart. Views =my own and not my employer's
There will be a movement on social media towards serif fonts as more and more people named Al get annoyed with their name looking like the acronym AI
On Monday Iβll be starting at Google DeepMind as a Visiting Researcher for my sabbatical (Jan-Dec 2025). Looking forward to contributing to solving challenging problems in the AI+Optimization for power systems space!
Makes sense!
That almost answers it. If most of the vars are accounted for locally, then itβs justified to have them rated in Watts
I think so, but itβs still not 1.0 pf, right?
Definitely, but how much? Just a ton of cap banks to cancel out hundreds of VAR from the motors?
As a ballpark, if you have a 1 GW data center (with the rating actually in Watts), where 40% of that is the cooling system, and 80% of the cooling system's energy consumption is AC motor loads, assuming an 80% power factor, that's 100's of MVar unaccounted for, making the effective rating ~1.3 GVA
2) Is it just that there's a lot of reactive power compensation so these motors do not pull VAR from the grid and their effective grid impact can just be expressed in watts?
3) If they are pulling VAr, what's the impact on harmonics with this level of reactive power loads? @xiaowang1984.bsky.social
1) Are the load growth numbers we see for data centers *actually* in MW or is this really MVA? If it's actually MW, the consumption is much higher than we thought (/wire sizing/transformer sizing / etc is much higher)
Data center power ratings in MW vs MVA is a good point made by @agelston.bsky.social .
If ~40% of a data center's energy consumption goes to the cooling system, and a large chunk of the cooling system's consumption is from AC motors, this is a large amount of reactive power. Which raises questions:
love it
she'll learn to count to 4 too!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8cc...
YES! π
Once I did just start explaining OPF because I heard itβs good to keep talking to them and I ran out of things to say π
One of her swings has some classical music which is probably good because otherwise sheβs just listening to pop and metal from me
Well also the compressor motors. Cooling systems have a lot of motors
How do you cool the hot things???
This is the only educational baby song I know so if anyone has other recommendations let me hear them
Boom! PJM now forecasts more than 30GW of summer peak load growth by the end of the decade.
Summer peak demand:
+ 6.7GW by 2026
+ 17.7GW by 2028
+ 31.7GW by 2030
Do AC motors require reactive power?
Do data centers have any motors? π
Yes
Need to get some for our cats tooβ¦
Kyri Georgia and Bridgetβs first Christmas together β€οΈ
Decided to arrange the stockings in order of age with the exception of Bridget and Georgia which we switched
My middle name is danger.
First name amperage last name voltage, sr. name fire
#EnergySky Duke Energy is demolishing a coal plant and putting batteries in its place - a great example of faster interconnection of new energy resources by utilizing existing grid assets! π‘π
(yes, they are also building a new gas plant nearby, but baby steps...)
www.canarymedia.com/articles/bat...
One of the best purchases Iβve ever made though
I love all the guesses but the correct answer is that this is an image of cat litter on a basement floor illuminated by the Dyson V15 Detect, the best vacuum Iβve ever owned
Brownie points for whoever correctly identifies what this image is
Ugh, this is true, and I still havenβt gotten over my love for free food as a tenured professor π
Hydro-Quebec sometimes uses helicopter to smash power lines with wooden poles to remove ice and/or snow
Ask @mjjones.bsky.social
Ice on power lines can be melted by temporarily overloading the line. High currents = high heat!