scholarly journals The effect of ceiling configurations on indoor air motion and ventilation flow rates

2011 ◽  
Vol 46 (5) ◽  
pp. 1211-1222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anh Tuan Nguyen ◽  
Sigrid Reiter
Keyword(s):  
1975 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 231-235
Author(s):  
I. Chand ◽  
P.K. Bhargava ◽  
N.L.V. Krishak
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 1092-1093 ◽  
pp. 805-809
Author(s):  
Dong Lai Xie ◽  
Jin Hui Luo

With the large-scale usage of coal and gasoline, China has been the most serious SO2-polluted country in the world. SO2 can cause respiratory and cardiovascular disease, which does great harm to human health. Therefore, developing an air purifier to absorb trace SO2 is very necessary. According to the mechanism of SO2 absorption with the alkaline solution, we developed an air purifier with an purification capacity of 80m3 -100m3 per hour. The purification effect with different gas flow rates, absorbing liquids and initial SO2 concentration was tested. Test results indicated that the purifier had a very good absorption of trace SO2 for indoor air. A SO2 purification model in confined space was established and the purification effect of the purifier was simulated with ANSYS FLUENT 14.0.


Velocity and droplet size characteristics of an unconfined quarl burner, of 16 mm quarl inlet diameter, have been measured with a phase-Doppler anemometer at a swirl number of about 0.29: the Reynolds number of the flow was 30000, based on the cold bulk velocity of 30.4 m s -1 and the hydraulic diameter. The atomization was achieved by shear between the swirling air and six radial kerosene jets and the resulting Sauter and arithmetic mean diameters were about 70 and 50 μm respectively after injection: velocity characteristics are presented for three 5 μm-wide size classes, 10, 30 and 60 μm. The flows correspond to no combustion and combustion of natural gas with a heat release of 8 kW supplemented by liquid kerosene flow rates sufficient to generate 21.6 and 37.2 kW : the gas equivalence ratio was 0.45 and atomized kerosene at two flow rates increased the overall ratios to 1.64 and 2.53. In non­-reacting flow, droplets 30 μm and smaller are sufficiently small to be entrained by the mean air velocity towards the central part of the flow and into the swirl-induced recirculating air bubble. The 60 μm droplets are able to travel through the bubble uninfluenced by turbulent fluctuations in the air and are ‘centrifuged’ away from the centreline, through acquisition of a mean swirl velocity component, so that a large proportion of the kerosene volume flow rate lies at the edge of the swirling jet. Because larger droplets are centrifuged to the outer part of the flow, whereas the smaller are entrained towards the centreline, the Sauter and arithmetic mean diameters are, by 1.22 quarl exit diameters downstream of the quarl, approximately 65 and 36 μm at the outer part of the flow and 35 and 12 μm near the centreline in the inert flow. In reacting flow, droplets evaporate rapidly in regions of elevated temperatures and hence no droplets are found within the flame brush and recirculation region. The aerodynamic response of each size class to the air velocity is similar to inert flow so that the majority of the kerosene flow is centrifuged away from the flame. On exit from the quarl, the evaporation and burning rates cause the Sauter and arithmetic mean diameters to be about 70 and 50 μm and 60 and 30 μm at the inner and outer edges of the spray respectively. By 1.22 quarl exit-diameters from the exit of the quarl, the air motion entrains droplets smaller than about 30 μm towards the flame, at the inner edge of the spray, so that the Sauter and arithmetic mean diameters are 60 and 40 μm at the outer edge of the jet. There is comparatively little effect of changing the flow rate of kerosene because the combustion is controlled by the low available number of smaller droplets, although the Group combustion number corresponds to ‘cloud’ burning. The relative response of droplets to the mean and turbulent components of air motion, including the ‘centrifuging’ effect, can be scaled to other flows through dimensionless numbers defined in the text.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-23
Author(s):  
B. Both ◽  
Z. Szánthó ◽  
R. Goda

The turbulence intensity is an important feature of the turbulent airflow and draught sensation in ventilated rooms. The turbulence is often measured with hot-wire (in fluid mechanics applications) and hot-sphere sensors (in indoor air comfort investigations). In this paper the turbulence was measured with hot-wire and hot-sphere sensors in a full-scale single office room based on air speed measurements. Isothermal air injection was applied and the measurements were conducted on eight different inlet volume flow rates. The two applied sensors resulted two independent samples, which were evaluated with different statistical methods. The results showed that there was not significant difference between the standard deviation and average of the measured samples. Thus, the two sensors statistically gave the same results on probability level 95%. The referred international standards suggest an average turbulence intensity 40% for draught comfort design in mixing ventilation. The results showed that most of the measured turbulence intensities were less than the recommended standard turbulence intensity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 209-219
Author(s):  
Mohamed Saied Ghoname

An experiment was conducted in three commercial laying hen houses with 32-week-old hens in the summer of 2017 in a commercial farm in Gharbia Province, Egypt (31.06ºN, 31.16ºE) using an evaporative pad cooling system to determine the most suitable water flow rate for maintaining indoor air temperature within the thermal comfort zone. The experiment was conducted using three different water flow rates, i.e. 4.76, 5.65, and 6.35 L min–1.m–2, to assess the effect of different water flow rates on evaporative pad cooling system performance and determine the most suitable water flow rate for maintaining the thermal comfort zone of laying hens. The evaporative pad cooling system maintained the mean indoor air temperature below 28°C. The mean indoor air relative humidity during the experimental period ranged from 72.6 to 73.8%. The 4.76 L min–1.m–2 water flow rate resulted in the highest saturation efficiency (ca. 73.75%). In contrast, the 6.35 L min–1 m–2 water flow rate resulted in the lowest saturation efficiency (70.63%). The mean cooling energy values were 69.11, 66.0, and 66.65 kwh for water flow rates of 4.76, 5.56, and 6.35 Lmin–1m–2, respectively. The highest temperature-humidity index was 27.78°C, which indicated that birds were not stressed in all treatments.


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