The present invention relates to recirculating forced air systems and, in particular, to a room entrance air return system that utilizes air return flow to balance air pressures and control air infiltration.
Air Handling Units (AHUs) are widely used in with heating, ventilating, air conditioning, and refrigerating (HVACR) systems to control temperature and humidity in commercial spaces. Outdoor air usually accounts for the largest heat transfer load. The term “outdoor air” can refer to air from outside the room, or air from outside the building. Outdoor air generally imparts loads on these systems by entering through door openings and dedicated AHU outdoor air intake openings. Minimization of air infiltration without a sacrifice in air quality is a common goal of HVACR system design.
In the interest of reducing air infiltration issues, air entrances have been established that use high velocity air streams impinged on door openings at right angles to the flow direction of people or products through the door opening. These systems reduce air infiltration at the cost of added fan power and limitations on operational effectiveness due to the maximum velocity. Maximum velocity is dictated by what is comfortable to the customer or users of the interior space. Such air entrance doors have been used in buildings such as supermarkets for over 40 years. According to Boon Edam there are over 3,000 entrances considered air entrance doors around the world. Claimed benefits include reduced insect and rodent infiltration (claims as high as 50%); comfortable front end areas; an open feel to the building occupants; less dirt in the buildings; energy savings; and no automatic door law suits or maintenance for automatic doors. Detracting from these benefits are high capital costs; negligible energy savings and possibly an increase in energy consumption; annoying air blowing on customers' hair; cold drafts in the winter, warm drafts in the summer as customers walk through the entrance; maintenance problems of keeping a pit clean and an additional HVAC system to repair; and a large floor grille that some people are uncomfortable to walk on, approximately 5 feet across.
The present invention provides an air handling system for enclosed spaces that maintains a neutral static pressure on the building while still allowing a large opening in the building to be used frequently such as an entrance into a supermarket. In one aspect, the invention provides a self balancing air handling system for conditioning an interior space including an air handling unit having an outlet for supplying conditioned air to the space, an entrance providing an access from an exterior space to the interior space, an air plenum surrounding the entrance, and an inlet for returning air from the plenum to the air handling unit wherein the air handling unit supplies air under conditions providing a positive pressure differential at the entrance thereby limiting infiltration air into the interior space from the exterior space.
The system incorporates a special air plenum connected to the return air of the AHU at the entrances to the conditioned space. The supply air of the system is distributed to the space such that the air flow pattern moves toward the building entrance, contrary to current designs. This creates a mass of moving air that establishes a pressure differential at the entrance interface that is capable of offsetting infiltration air seeking to enter the space from the exterior. The infiltration air now collides with the supply air from the building in a positive pressure interface forcing the outdoor air and all of its contaminants into the air handling return air intake. The AHU air return flow achieves balanced air pressures and controls air infiltration. The AHU return air is gathered at the door opening in a direction that is in 180 degree opposition to air infiltration from outside of the treated room or treated building. Due to the larger velocity pressure of the return air stream, the infiltration air stream cannot move into the room. Therefore, as the opposed air streams meet, the smaller air stream, the infiltration air stream, is entrained into the larger air stream, the return air stream. This mixture of air streams can be described as a mixed return air stream. The mixed return air stream is gathered into an air entrance plenum system that eventually forms a singular mixed return duct to deliver the mixed return air stream to an AHU for treatment. Treatment in the AHU may include heating, humidification, ventilation, cooling, sterilization, and dehumidification. As is common practice, the AHU delivers the treated air to a supply duct system. The supply duct system supplies treated air to the room or building. This supply air flows through the room or building and returns again to the air return and entrance door.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide an air handling system that is integrated with the entrance of the building so that the majority of the outdoor intake air is brought through the entrances of the building in such away that a neutral building pressurization is achieved passively.
Another object is to provide an air handling system that is able to compensate for large winds entering a building thereby reducing drafts.
A further object is to provide a system that utilizes the mechanical energy of the return air velocity pressure to offset inward pressures of the outdoor ambient air that infiltrate a building.
Yet another object is to provide a system that does not have the additional cost of separate installed Air Entrance components like fans and heaters.
Still another object is an entrance door system that is very simple to install and balance in regards to makeup air and outdoor air infiltration.
The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
Where building codes require forced ventilation of indoor spaces when air contaminate levels rise (such as CO2), an optional outdoor air intake 34 is added to AHU 14. In this case, the ventilation requirement may be satisfied by turning on the exhaust fans 30, 32, and opening outdoor air intake 34 through manual operation or automatic controls. Thus, the outdoor air intake 34 and the exterior door 18 would both bring in outdoor air to mix in the return air system as described below. The exterior door 18 is the physical barrier to the outdoor environment. The return air inlets 27 may not be required if the return air requirements for the entrance door 16 are satisfied in a dynamically balanced condition, responding as necessary by altering the content of infiltration air from whatever the source. The exterior door 18 may be open full time, or it may open and close intermittently or dependent on environmental conditions. Each space may include one or more additional entrance door systems. One or more air handling units may service the space, however, the system overall will operate each entrance door as described below.
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It is commonly known that in commercial spaces the static pressure of the indoor room (SP1) is naturally lower than that of the vestibule (SP2) and necessarily lower than the static pressure outdoors. This difference varies in accordance with prevailing exterior conditions and often causes significant infiltration in conventional systems. With the air entrance 16, this difference in static pressure is overcome by an opposite difference in velocity pressures, causing all of the infiltration air to be carried to the AHU for treatment rather than passing to indoor room 12. This will occur through the provision of an air handling unit that provides sufficient mass flow to provide the positive pressure differential notwithstanding the variations in air demands.
Thus, for facilities have a large interior space, the air flow rate for conditioning the air may be in excess of that required for balanced air entrance door. Accordingly, interior space return inlets may be used as required. Where ventilation makeup air requirements, ongoing or intermittent, are a consideration, the air handling unit provides a sufficient net flow to establish the pressure differential.
Field testing has verified that system can create velocity pressures at the entrance door sufficient to overcome outdoor air infiltration with hourly average return air velocities ranging from 150 standard feet per minute (sfpm) to 500 sfpm. Lower velocities may allow the interface to be temporarily penetrated by wind gusts. Higher velocities can lead to excessive turbulence and drafts. These supply conditions can function properly with infiltration air velocities at air entrance 16 ranging up to 150 sfpm. Within these design velocities, the entrance door will self balance at each point where the air streams collide, or mix, such that TP1=TP2 and therefore SP1+VP2=SP2+VP2. This self balancing effect means that the air infiltration will naturally increase and decrease with changes in indoor exhaust, changes in outdoor wind speed, and changes in door openings. During this self balancing the infiltration air is captured at numbers approaching rates of 95 to 100% by air entrance 6.
The balancing can also be enhanced by considerations at the plenum air intake. For instance, it is well known that colder air at the lower door levels can constitute a source of outward air flow from the room. Accordingly, the intake design can provide for greater air velocity at the lower portions of the opening and lesser air velocity and flow at the upper portions. If the point of collision of air entrance 16 has velocities on the low end of the spectrum, optional air flow baffles can be utilized to improve air distribution and insure that the air flow from the lower half of air entrance 16 is sufficient to capture infiltration air from the vestibule. Also, rather than a continuous grid, air flow adjustment means including vanes, baffles and the like can be used at discrete locations about the entrance surround for achieving the desired distribution and balance of air flow.
The foregoing is also illustrated by the following example.
A supermarket having an interior space of about 50,000 sf. had an air handling unit with a capacity of 30,000 cfm. An entrance opening of 8 ft by 8 ft was surrounded by an air plenum 2 ft in width and 2 ft in depth. A honeycombed grill was used for the plenum intake. Average supply air velocity at the entrance was 270 fpm. Average velocity entering vestibule was 40 fpm. Average velocity at the entrance door was 32 fpm. Without exhaust fans operating, average intake velocities through the grill were measured by anemometer at about 323 fpm. Outside temperature was at 15° F. Wind gusts were periodic. During wind gusts, it was noted with smoke tests that the interface billowed inward, but remained intact, and after a short period a planar interface with minor turbulence was reestablished. Temperatures adjacent the interface remain at interior temperature. No noticeable drafts were experienced by patrons entering the store. When exhaust fans were operated, the interface again inwardly billowed, but was quickly reestablished. Short term comparisons indicated an energy saving over comparable historical periods thereby demonstrating that the air entrance can provide the open door balanced condition notwithstanding extreme ambient conditions of wind and temperature.
Having thus described a presently preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will now be appreciated that the objects of the invention have been fully achieved, and it will be understood by those skilled in the art that many changes in construction and widely differing embodiments and applications of the invention will suggest themselves without departing from the sprit and scope of the present invention. The disclosures and description herein are intended to be illustrative and are not in any sense limiting of the invention, which is defined solely in accordance with the following claim.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080233860 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |