Workload composition smooths aggregate power demand while sustaining short-horizon ramps in AI data centers

April 12, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Subir Majumder, Minlan Yu, Le Xie arXiv ID 2604.10769 Category eess.SY: Systems & Control (EE) Cross-listed cs.DC, cs.PF Citations 0
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is driving rapid growth in electricity demand, yet the grid-facing power dynamics of AI data centers remain poorly understood. Here we show that, in shared-GPU systems, the composition of batch and inference workloads decouples aggregate power variability from short-horizon ramping. As the inference share rises, variability becomes U-shaped, whereas ramping becomes hump-shaped, particularly under higher loading. The magnitude and turning points of these patterns also depend on system loading. Using a trace-calibrated framework linking workload arrivals, queueing, scheduling, and GPU power, we show that the underlying mechanism is asymmetric. At intermediate workload mixes, queued batch jobs fill capacity left idle by fluctuating inference demand, reducing aggregate power variability. However, short-horizon ramping remains elevated because inference-side fluctuations propagate more directly into realized power. AI data centers should therefore be understood as dynamic systems whose workload composition shapes their grid impact.
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