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Fans for a Greener Future

the Obligations of Specifiers,


Manufacturers and Users
by

W. T. W. (Bill) Cory
DEng, MSc, CEng, FIMechE, MCIBSE, MIAgrE, FRSH, MIIAV
Chairman of ISO TC117, Fans, Eurovent WG1 Fans, BSI MCE17 Fans,
Past President (2003) AMCA International

Fan Manufacturers Association

Part 1
Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans and
Duct Systems

Fan Manufacturers Association

Outline

Air fundamentals, volume, pressure & power


Fan and Air Systems

Fan performance curves


Air systems & system resistance curve
Interaction of system curve and fan curve
Fan laws & density effects
Fan testing & ratings

Lead into selecting the right fan

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 2

Fan Manufacturers Association

Standard Air Density


Standard air density = 1.2 kg/m3
Air temperature of

Air temperature of 16C

20C

Altitude at 0 m elevation (sea level)

Altitude at 0 m

or

Barometric pressure of 100 kPa.

elevation (sea level)

Dry air.

Barometric pressure of

Specific volume of 0.833 m3/kg

101.325 kPa
Relative humidity 50%
Specific volume of

or

3/kg
0.833
Any set
of m
conditions
that produce an air density of 1.2 kg/m3

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 3

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Total Pressure


Fan (Total) Pressure (FTP)
Total mechanical energy added to the air by the fan
FTP = TP at outlet TP at inlet
TP = static pressure (SP) + velocity pressure (VP)

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 4

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Static Pressure


Fan Static Pressure (FSP)
The fan total pressure less the fan velocity pressure
FSP = SP at outlet TP at inlet
SP = total pressure (TP) velocity pressure (VP)

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 5

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Velocity Pressure


Fan Velocity Pressure (VP)
The pressure corresponding the fan outlet velocity
The kinetic energy per unit volume of flowing air
VP = total pressure (TP) static pressure (SP)
VP = 0.5 v2
= Density in kg/m3

= Velocity in m/s

If standard air :
VP = 0.6 V2
Airflow = m3/s = V x Area m2

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 6

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Air Volume

The volume of air moved by the fan is usually expressed in

metre cubed per second


A m3/s = volume of air moved by the fan at any air density
S m3/s = volume of air moved by the fan at standard air density (1.2 kg/m3)

Measured using Pitt tube (VP), calibrated nozzle, venturi or

orifice plate

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 7

Fan Manufacturers Association

Piezometer Ring for Flow


measurement in fans
Laboratory calibrated airflow

Piezometer Ring Mounted


at Throat of Inlet Cone

Inlet Tap Mounted on


Face of Inlet Cone

data available by simply


measuring the pressure drop
across the inlet cone.
Unlike other airflow measuring
stations, there are no inlet
airflow obstructions.
Helpful in diagnosing AHU
performance deficiencies and
quantifying system
effectsgood insurance policy
Helpful in reporting fan airflow
in Building Automation Systems

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 8

Fan Manufacturers Association

Piezometer Ring for Flow Measurement does


not obstruct Fan Inlet
Airflow measuring device
Based on the principle of a flow nozzle.
Standard inlet cone is the flow nozzle .
Piezometer ring mounted in throat, static tap mounted on the face of the

inlet cone.
Flow coefficients determined in the manufacturers laboratory for different
fan types.

Am3/s
Where:
A
Constant
Am3/s
P

= Constant .A.

= Inlet tunnel throat area (square metres)


= determined in the laboratory for different fan types
= inlet volume flow
= Pressure drop across inlet cone Pa
= Density of air kg/m3

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 9

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Power

Air Power (P)


Assuming 100% efficiency, the power required to move a given volume of

air against given pressure.


Static AP = m3/s x ps Watt.
Total AP = m3/s x pc Watt.

Brake Power (P)


The actual power a fan requires.
BP > AP, because a fan is not 100% efficient.
In addition to fan power input, BP may include power absorbed by V-belt

drive, accessories, etc.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 10

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Efficiency

Static Efficiency (SE)


Ratio of fan power output to the fan power input.
Uses SP, which does not include kinetic energy.
SE = Static Air power/brake power.

Mechanical Efficiency (ME) or Total Efficiency (TE)


Ratio of total fan power output to the fan power input.
Uses TP, which includes kinetic energy.
EE = Total Air power/brake power.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 11

Fan Manufacturers Association

Relating Fan Power, flow, Pressure


The purpose of a fan is to add energy to the air.
To move air from one point to another

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 12

Fan Manufacturers Association

Cont:-

Fan Airflow (m3/s)


m3/s is based on continuity
m3/s = V1 A1 = V2 A2+

Fan TP
TPF = TP2 TP1
TPF = SP2 + VP2 (SP1 + VP1)

Fan SP
SPF = TPF VP2
SPF = SP2 + VP2 (SP1 + VP1) VP2
SPF = SP2 TP1

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 13

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Performance Curve


The test data is plotted producing a fan curve

Air Volume m3/s


Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 14

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Performance Curve

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 15

Fan Manufacturers Association

System Curve

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 16

Fan Manufacturers Association

System Resistance Curve - Example

2.5

Point 1:
1 kPa
20

m3/s
1.5

Point 1:

30 m3/s

2.25 kPa
0.5

0
0

10

20

30

40

60

Airflow in m3/s

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 17

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Operating Point

0.75

SP kPa

0.5

0.25

0
0

2.5

7.5

10

12.5

Fan operating point will be the intersection of the fan performance

curve and the system curve the fan is operating on

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 18

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan & System Point of Operation


A fan will operate at the point where the system resistance curve

intersects the fan curve


System Resistance Curve
Power Requirement
Power Curve
Point of Operation
Fan Performance Curve

Q m3/s

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 19

Fan Manufacturers Association

Cont:-

0.75

SP kPa

0.5

0.25

0
0

2.5

7.5

10

Q m3/s

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 20

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Stall

Aerodynamic effect.

Fan unstable operation.

Less severe than surge.

Move clip.

2.5

7.5

10

12.5

15

Q m3/s

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 21

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Surge
Interaction with system
Fan operation is very unstable
Pulsating flow at inlet and discharge
Movie clip

SP kPa

0.5

0.25

0
0

2.5

7.5

10

12.5

15

Not to scale

Q m3/s
Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 22

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Useful Application Range

SP kPa

0.5

0.25

0
0

2.5

7.5

Q m3/s

10

12.5

15

2.5

7.5

10

12.5

15

Q m3/s

Not to scale

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 23

Fan Manufacturers Association

Laboratory Test Setup

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 24

Fan Manufacturers Association

Laboratory Test Setup


Notes:
No Box (housing) around fan

when plenum fans are rated


by fan manufacturers - ideal
fan performance
Box causes aerodynamic

losses called system effect


different from system
resistance
System Resistance is the

pressure drop associated with


system components like
ducts, filter, coils etc for a
given flow.
AHU manufacturers test fans

in boxes and apply system


effect derates per ARI stds

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 25

Fan Manufacturers Association

ISO 5801 Test Setup multi nozzle


chamber

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 26

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Curve Definitions


0.75

0.5

0.25

Flow Q m3/s
Not to scale

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 27

Fan Manufacturers Association

On the lighter side Wake Up Time!!!

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 28

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Laws
Dynamic Similitude
Effect of RPM Change, Law 1
Effect of Fan Diameter Change,

Law 2
Effects of fan Diameter and RPM
Change, Law 3
Density Effects, Law 4
Summary of Fan Laws
Standard Air

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 29

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Laws
Symbols

Q
SP
W
RPM
D

Airflow rate in metres cubed per second


Static Pressure
Brake Power
Speed in Revolutions Per Minute
Diameter in millimetres
Density in kg/m3

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 30

Fan Manufacturers Association

Dynamic Similitude
Flow systems are considered to be dynamically similar if:
they are geometrically similar.
the forces acting in one system are in the same ratio to each other as

similar forces in the second system.


Geometric similarity implies that all physical dimensions in all three
Cartesian axis must have the same linear ratio, all surface roughness
properties must scale and all angles, flow directions and orientations must
be maintained.
Flow systems are dynamically similar if the dimensionless parameters
obtained in a dimensional analysis of the systems are the same for both
(like Re number).
For two fans to be geometrically similar, the number of blades must be
equal.
Fan laws are only applicable for dynamically similar systems.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 31

Fan Manufacturers Association

Effect of RPM Change, Law 1


Q varies directly as the RPM

Q1 RPM 1
=
Q2 RPM 2

Static pressure varies as the square of the RPM

Power varies as the cube of the RPM

WP1 RPM 1
=

WP2 RPM 3

SP1 RPM 1
=

SP2 RPM 2

Efficiency will not change

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 32

Fan Manufacturers Association

Effect of Fan Diameter Change Law 2


D1
Q1
=

Q2
D
2

D1
SP 1
=

SP 2
D
2

D1
W1
=

W2
D
2

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 33

Fan Manufacturers Association

Effects of Fan Diameter and RPM Change


Law 3
Q varies directly as the RPM

and as the cube of the fan


diameter:

Q1 RPM 1 D1
=

Q2 RPM 2 D2

SP varies as the square of

RPM and wheel diameter:

W varies as the cube of RPM

and as the fifth power of fan


diameter:

SP1 RPM 1 D1
=

SP2 RPM 2 D2

WP1 RPM 1
=

WP2 RPM 2

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 34

D1

D2

Fan Manufacturers Association

Density Effects, Law 4


Fan volume Q in m3/s will not change with density: Q1 = Q2
SP and BkW will vary in direct proportion to density:

SP1 W1 1
=
=
SP2 W2 2

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 35

Fan Manufacturers Association

Summary of Fan Laws


3

Q1 D1 RPM
=

Q 2 D 2 RPM

SP1 D1 RPM
=

SP2 D 2 RPM
5

W 1 D1 RPM
=

W 2 D 2 RPM

2
2

2
2

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 36

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Testing and Rating


Fans are tested in setups that simulate installations.
Four standard installation types:

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 37

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Testing and Rating


Fans are tested at given speed (RPM) per ISO std 5801.
Volumetric flow rate (CFM) is measured at:
No resistance (wide open volume or free delivery)
Compete resistance (shut off) and Everything in between.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 38

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Testing and Rating


Not all fan sizes are tested for rating. ISO 5801 provides the CRP for air

performance.
By use of equations call fans laws test data is used to calculate
performance of a larger fan that is geometrically similar (not smaller).
Not practical to test a fan at every speed.
By use of fan laws it is possible to predict fan performance at various

speeds.
Fans are tested & rated at standard sir density.
Fan performance can be predicted at varying air densities by using

fans laws.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 39

Fan Manufacturers Association

A m3/s vs. Std m3/s


m3/s = actual metres cubed per second
Represent the actual conditions of the job, not corrected to standard density

conditions.
Represents the volume of gas flowing anywhere in the system independent
of air density.
Sm3/s= standard metres cubed per second
Volume that gas would occupy if at standard density.
Selecting a fan when S m3/s is specified requires us to calculate in A m3/s is

sometimes identified by specifying kg/s (mass flow rate).

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 40

Fan Manufacturers Association

Temperature Effect
Temperatures other than 20C affect density.
At temperatures above 20C air density is less (lighter air), thus SP and

W are less.
At temperatures below 20C air density is greater (heavier air), thus SP

and W are greater.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 41

Fan Manufacturers Association

Altitude Effect
Altitudes other than sea level affect density.
At altitudes above sea level, air density is less (lighter air), thus SP

and W are less.


At altitudes below sea level, air density is greater (heavier air), thus
SP and W are more.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 42

Fan Manufacturers Association

Density Effects on fan Performance


The reduction in SP is proportional to the reduction in W, therefore

the overall fan efficiency will remain unchanged.


3
m
Q

Total Efficiency =

s TP kPa
1
2

3
m
Q

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 43

s TP

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fans in Parallel

SP2 = SP1

Q2 = 2Q1

w2 = 2 w1

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 44

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fans in Series

SP2 = 2 SP1

Q2 = Q1

w2 = 2 w1

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 45

Fan Manufacturers Association

All fans selected at peak SE (Static Efficiency) for


Airflows 4.72 m3/s, Static Pressure (SP) 0.5 kPa
Type

Dia
(mm)

Spd
(rpm)

Power
W

SE%
(Static)

Lwi A
(inlet)
Sound
Power A)

Forward CurvedSW (Centrifugal)

760

476

3.8

61.7

89

Backward Aerofoil
SW (Centrifugal)

930

650

2.84

80.0

77

Plenum

838

800

3.17

74.0

80

Tubular Mixed
Flow

686

1074

3.34

70.2

81

Tubular Vane Axial

710

1438

3.56

65.9

86

Propeller (Axial)

760

1998

3.59

54.4

103

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 46

Fan Manufacturers Association

Fan Selection Considerations

Fan selection is not a trivial process for a given application.


Example shown applies to one design operating point. The selections
will change for other operating points.
There is no magic fan that will result in least cost, best efficiency and low
noise for a wide range of operation points.
Compromises should be well understood upfront.
Sometimes Direct Drive (DD) is preferred due to their simplicity (no belts,
dives etc). DD selection speeds may further limits selections. Varying
width options can optimise DD selections.
Mechanical design requirements like balancing and vibration levels,
spark and high temperature resistance, corrosion resistance,
arrangements, bearings, motors and drives can further challenge the
selection process.

Part 1 - Fundamentals of Airflow, Fans & Duct Systems - Slide 47

Fan Manufacturers Association

End of Part 1

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