breakingthescience
Mechanical
- Jul 14, 2021
- 7
I have a 600 sq.ft. room, x 15 ft high that houses three 75HP air compressors. In lieu of ducting each compressor individually, I'd like to provide a single exhaust fan on the roof, and interlock it with a louver on the exterior wall.
Each compressor's internal air-cooled fan does 8,000 CFM.
When exhausting the room, instead of the compressor, I've seen manufacturers recommend to do twice the CFM of the compressor fan. The reason being that the airflow is sized to allow a ~30 degree rise, but you don't want a 30 degree rise in the room, so you therefore need to exhaust more.
My dilemma is that it would equate to 48,000 CFM for a 600 sq.ft. room. This is obviously ridiculous. Even 24,000 CFM seems crazy.
If I provide an exhaust fan that does 18,000 CFM, it would result in 120 air changes per hour. I would think that such a high airflow and exchange rate would throw any temperature rise formulas out the window (no pun intended). There just simply wouldn't be enough time for the room to rise in temperature, it would just become equal with the ambient makeup air.
I am looking for some thoughts on this and if anyone has an opinion on how many air changes are needed to essentially reject any amount of heat generated in a room.
Thanks!
Each compressor's internal air-cooled fan does 8,000 CFM.
When exhausting the room, instead of the compressor, I've seen manufacturers recommend to do twice the CFM of the compressor fan. The reason being that the airflow is sized to allow a ~30 degree rise, but you don't want a 30 degree rise in the room, so you therefore need to exhaust more.
My dilemma is that it would equate to 48,000 CFM for a 600 sq.ft. room. This is obviously ridiculous. Even 24,000 CFM seems crazy.
If I provide an exhaust fan that does 18,000 CFM, it would result in 120 air changes per hour. I would think that such a high airflow and exchange rate would throw any temperature rise formulas out the window (no pun intended). There just simply wouldn't be enough time for the room to rise in temperature, it would just become equal with the ambient makeup air.
I am looking for some thoughts on this and if anyone has an opinion on how many air changes are needed to essentially reject any amount of heat generated in a room.
Thanks!