If you have spent your career specifying relief valves for steam systems or industrial process piping, the move to liquid-cooled data center infrastructure presents an unfamiliar combination: ASME Section VIII stamping requirements combined with sanitary-style end connections and surface finishes that come from a different industry tradition.
This guide walks through the nine elements you have to specify on a Coolant Distribution Unit (CDU) or Secondary Fluid Network (SFN) relief valve, with the practical defaults that work for most installations and the questions to ask when the application is non-standard.
Quick takeaway: A code-compliant DCC relief valve is 316 stainless steel, tri-clamp, EPDM seat, ASME Section VIII Liquid (UV stamp), set at the lower of the protected vessel’s design pressure or the trapped section’s weakest component rating, with 32 Ra wetted surface finish on hyperscale specs. The nine-element checklist below covers every spec axis.
1. Media (Cooling Fluid)
The dominant cooling fluid in CDU and SFN service is a 25–40% propylene glycol / water mix. A small but growing portion of the market is using engineered dielectric fluids for direct-to-chip or immersion duty.
The media choice drives material selection and certification path. For glycol-water:
- 316 stainless body and wetted parts
- EPDM seat default
- ASME Section VIII Liquid service certification
For dielectric fluids, confirm seat material compatibility with the specific fluid (most engineered dielectrics are compatible with EPDM and Viton, but not all). The certification path is the same.
2. Design Pressure of the Protected Vessel
This is the number that determines whether ASME Section VIII applies at all. Above 15 psig design pressure, you are in Section VIII territory and the relief valve must be UV-stamped. For CDU primary safety the answer is almost always yes.
Pull the design pressure from the heat exchanger nameplate or the CDU manufacturer’s data package. Do not use the normal operating pressure as a proxy for design pressure — they are often quite different, and the relief is sized off the higher number.
3. Set Pressure
Set pressure is the lower of:
- The design pressure of the protected vessel
- The flange or pipe rating of the lowest-pressure component in the trapped section
Typical CDU primary safety set pressures fall in the 100–150 psig range for current-generation cold-plate loops, with some hyperscale designs pushing higher as rack densities climb. For expansion relief on subsections of the loop, set 1.10–1.20× normal operating pressure.
4. Required Relief Capacity
For primary safety duty: the worst-case relief flow is the maximum flow that can enter the protected vessel at the relief overpressure. For a CDU, that usually means the pump deadhead flow into a blocked discharge.
For expansion duty: the flow is the rate of fluid volume change due to temperature rise — orders of magnitude smaller than primary safety flow. Specify the smallest orifice the manufacturer offers for expansion duty.
For SFN secondary protection: size to the worst-case scenario of an isolation valve closing against a running pump.
5. End Connections
For modern CDU and SFN piping, the answer is increasingly tri-clamp (per ASME BPE — Bioprocessing Equipment standard). Common sizes:
- ½″ tri-clamp for expansion relief
- 1″ tri-clamp for SFN branches and small CDU loops
- 2″ tri-clamp for primary CDU heat exchanger relief
NPT (National Pipe Taper) is acceptable for some installations but increasingly considered legacy in greenfield data center work. BSPT (British Standard Pipe Taper) shows up on equipment sourced from European OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers).
6. Body and Seat Materials
Defaults for glycol-water:
- Body: 316 stainless steel
- Seat: EPDM (compatible with water and water / glycol; broad temperature range; low cost)
Alternatives when the application demands:
- Viton (FKM — fluorocarbon elastomer): if the loop will see temperatures above ~150 °F
- PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene): when chemical compatibility requires fluoropolymer — but check procurement scrutiny on fluoropolymer components in your jurisdiction (Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances / PFAS)
- Buna (Nitrile): compatible with glycol / water; EPDM generally preferred for broader temperature range and longer service life
- Kalrez: reserve for engineered dielectrics with specific chemistry
7. Surface Finish
The emerging hyperscale specification is 32 microinches Ra (Roughness Average) or better on all wetted surfaces. This is a sanitary-finish requirement, called out to prevent particulate generation that fouls cold-plate micro-channels.
Most ASME-stamped manufacturers can provide polished wetted parts on request. Specify the finish explicitly in the part number or the order — it is rarely the default.
8. Certification and Stamping
For a code-required pressure vessel relief valve:
- ASME Section VIII UV stamp required on the valve nameplate
- National Board of Boiler and Pressure Vessel Inspectors capacity certification on file
- Factory test report; set-pressure tolerance per ASME (typically ±3%)
- Material certifications (mill certs) available on request
In Aquatrol part-number nomenclature, the service code “J” denotes ASME Section VIII Liquid. For air / gas, the code is “K”; for steam, “L”.
9. Cap Style
For the CDU and SFN relief positions, the default is closed cap. The valve is set, tested, and sealed at the factory; periodic testing is done by replacement rather than in-place lift.
If the operations team wants to be able to verify lift in place, specify a lift lever (open or packed). Packed lift lever is appropriate when the valve discharges to a captured drain or recovery tank.
Common Mistakes
- Specifying a sanitary (non-code) valve when ASME Section VIII applies. The valve fails the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) inspection.
- Using a primary safety relief in an expansion-relief position. Oversized; chatters and leaks over time.
- Forgetting the surface finish callout. The valve ships with mill-finish wetted parts, generates particulate, fouls a cold plate, takes the row down.
- Specifying Buna or unspecified soft seat on long-duration glycol service at elevated temperatures. EPDM is the more durable default for water and water / glycol.
- Routing relief discharge back into the loop. Defeats the relief function on closed-loop events.
Engineer’s takeaway: The nine-element framework removes ambiguity from the spec process. Default to 316 SS / tri-clamp / EPDM / closed cap / ASME VIII Liquid / 32 Ra finish, and modify only when the application genuinely requires it.
Copy-Ready Spec Checklist
For a typical CDU primary safety relief:
- Manufacturer: ASME-authorized
- Body: 316 stainless steel
- Connections: __ tri-clamp × __ tri-clamp (size to loop)
- Seat: EPDM (water / glycol)
- Cap: closed
- Service: ASME Section VIII Liquid
- Set pressure: ___ psig (per protected vessel design)
- Capacity: certified for ____ gpm at 10% overpressure
- Surface finish: 32 Ra wetted
- Certification: UV stamp, National Board capacity certificate
- Documentation: nameplate, factory test report, mill certs on request
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