I'm a big fan of district heating, but it's something that needs to be built before the datacenter is. It also doesn't really work well if the datacenter isn't in an already cool region.
> Or turn it back into electricity.
The temps aren't high enough to do that easily. You need boiling water to generate electricity, and chips don't like running at or above 100C.
It's possible you could use a heat pump to turn hot water into boiling water, but that will stop working when temps get out of band. You might be able do it with a sterling engine, but you'd, ironically, need a supply of cool water to keep those running.
I'm a big fan of district heating, but it's something that needs to be built before the datacenter is. It also doesn't really work well if the datacenter isn't in an already cool region.
> Or turn it back into electricity.
The temps aren't high enough to do that easily. You need boiling water to generate electricity, and chips don't like running at or above 100C.
It's possible you could use a heat pump to turn hot water into boiling water, but that will stop working when temps get out of band. You might be able do it with a sterling engine, but you'd, ironically, need a supply of cool water to keep those running.