SYSYOCMay 15

Watts vs. Bytes: Turning Data Centers into Grid Assets via Storage Compute Co-Optimization

arXiv:2605.1619055.3
Predicted impact top 5% in SY · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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For data center operators and grid operators, this work demonstrates that coordinated compute-storage flexibility can expand operational headroom and grid value under increasing grid stress.

This paper develops a robust co-optimization framework for day-ahead operation of data centers with co-located battery energy storage systems (BESS) under utility-imposed interconnection limits. Results show that under stressed peak-load and ramping limits, the daily value of BESS increases by a factor of two or more, and a higher share of non-schedulable jobs can increase operating cost by more than 25%.

Enabling continued data-center growth under increasing grid stress motivates closer coordination between flexible computing demand and co-located battery energy storage systems (BESS) to improve site operations and provide grid services. This paper develops a robust co-optimization framework for day-ahead operation of data centers with co-located BESS under utility-imposed interconnection limits on peak load and ramping. The model jointly considers deadline-constrained computing workloads, managed through workload scheduling and dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), together with degradation-aware BESS dispatch to enable cost optimization and participation in ancillary-service markets. Case studies based on real-world market and workload data show that the proposed framework yields feasible day-ahead schedules across a range of operating conditions, with substantially larger benefits when interconnection constraints become binding. Under baseline conditions, BESS value is derived from both ancillary-service participation and improved workload and energy management. Under stressed peak-load and ramping limits, however, the daily value of BESS increases by a factor of two or more, driven primarily \revise{by BESS actions to reduce the potential incompletion in the schedulable workload while complying with interconnection constraints}. Under tight peak-load caps, workload composition also matters where a higher share of non-schedulable jobs can increase operating cost by more than 25\% relative to more flexible workload mixes. \revise{Additionally, DVFS studies further show that processor-level control is a material flexibility lever under tight load limits.} These results demonstrate that coordinated compute-storage flexibility can materially expand the operational headroom and grid value of data centers, especially under increasingly scarce grid capacity.

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