KLCC District Cooling - meaning and definition. What is KLCC District Cooling
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What (who) is KLCC District Cooling - definition


KLCC District Cooling         
  • High-rise office blocks and hotels around Petronas Twin Towers, from left (directly in front of the Twin Towers) is Menara Carigali, Menara Maxis, Mandarin Oriental Hotel and Four Seasons Place Kuala Lumpur.
  • The KLCC Park
  • The Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre
  • Mandarin Oriental Kuala Lumpur in KLCC
  • View of the KLCC precinct at night from the [[Kuala Lumpur Tower]].
  • Interior of Suria KLCC in 2021
DISTRICT IN FEDERAL TERRITORY OF KUALA LUMPUR
KLCC District Cooling; Kuala Lumpur City Center; KL City Centre
KLCC District Cooling is a building that is used to provide district cooling for the KLCC vicinity. It is a 30,000 ton gas-powered turbine-driven chilled water unit providing cool air not only to Petronas Twin Towers and Suria KLCC, but also to Maxis Tower, Menara Exxon Mobil, Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre, and Mandarin Oriental Kuala Lumpur as well as As Syakirin Mosque.
Passive daytime radiative cooling         
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  • Broadband PDRC emitters emit in both the solar spectrum and the infrared window (8 and 14 μm), while selective PDRC emitters only emit in the infrared window.<ref name=":54" />
  • [[Desert climate]]s have the highest radiative cooling potential due to low humidity and cloud cover.<ref name=":21" />
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  • A PDRC installed on a roof in [[Kolkata]] exhibited a nearly 4.9ᵒC decrease in surface ground temperatures (with an average reduction of 2.2ᵒC).<ref name=":13" />
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  • Global map of cloud cover. Data taken from 2002 to 2015. The darker the color, the clearer the sky.
  • [[Temperate climate]]s have a moderate to high radiative cooling potential.<ref name=":21" />
  • [[Solar cell efficiency]] can be improved with PDRC application to reduce overheating and degradation of cells.<ref name="Heo 2022 Ju lee"/>
  • outgoing infrared radiation]] (shown in orange) and minimize the absorption of [[Solar Radiation]] (shown in yellow).
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  • Modifying PDRCs with [[vanadium dioxide]] (pictured) can achieve temperature-based 'switching' from cooling to heating to mitigate the "overcooling" effect.<ref name=":54" />
  • Global map of average [[annual precipitation]]. The darker the color, the higher the precipitation.
MANAGEMENT STRATEGY FOR GLOBAL WARMING
Passive radiative cooling; Daytime passive radiative cooling; Daytime radiative cooling
Passive daytime radiative cooling (PDRC), passive radiative cooling (PRC), or terrestrial radiative cooling is a solar radiation management strategy that has been proposed as a solution to global warming which involves the mass installation of sky-facing surfaces on Earth that reflect heat to outer space to reverse local and global temperature increases while requiring zero energy consumption or pollution. Because all materials in nature absorb more heat during the day than at night, PDRC surfaces are designed to maximize the efficiency of both solar reflectance (in 0.
Immersion cooling         
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  • Network router and smart-phone immersed in synthetic single-phase, liquid immersion coolant
  • 600x600px
  • Example of server immersion cooling of one server
IT COOLING PRACTICE
User:Dpope83/Server Immersion Cooling; Draft:Server Immersion Cooling; Server Immersion Cooling; Server immersion cooling; Immersion Cooling
Immersion cooling is a thermal management technique, often applied as an IT cooling practice, by which electronic devices and IT components, including complete servers and storage devices, are submerged in a thermally conductive but electrically insulating dielectric liquid or coolant. Heat is removed from the system by circulating relatively cold liquid into direct contact with hot components, then circulating the now heated liquid through cool heat exchangers.