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Slowing air velocity for coil install

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venter

Mechanical
Jul 12, 2006
3
Hey guys I have 36" dia duct with a velocity of 1250 fpm and 9000 cfm flow. I want to slow the velocity down to 450 fpm by increasing the duct area. Can anyone provide an equasion on the length of duct need before the velocity will stabilize.
 
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You need a 60" dia, duct whoch will give you a 0.003986"wc friction rate at 100 TEL to get 450 FPM
 
I have not seen a design guide with an equation of velocity profile as a function of angle a diverging flow. SMACNA does have loss a coefficient formula in A.21 - transition round to square but this will only give you the loss. SMACNA shows a max of 45 deg as a design standard. I look at the coil selection first, then make the duct work. Most coils are going to be rectangular. I think you would be in the range of a 60"w x 48" or 80"w x 36". Your inlet velocity is low for a 36". Use 1' to 2' straight duct in front of the coil to help equalize the velocity profile. Perforated panels upstream help but add fan hp. Make sure you have 3 to 10 duct dia. up stream of the transition.
 
AMCA may have something, look under System Effects.
 
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