ASHRAE NA-04-7-2-2004 Quantitative Multistage Pressurizations in Controlled and Critical Environments《在控制和关键环境下的数量多的多段式的增压》.pdf
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1、NA-04-7-2 Quantitative Multistage Pressurizations in Con t ro I I ed and C rit i ca I E nvi ron ment s Wei Sun, P.E. Member ASHRAE ABSTRACT The space pressurization technique is one of the key elements in design of controlled or critical environments (CCE). This technique is much more complicated fo
2、r multiple rooms under various and stugedpressurization levels, and the design criteria of this “multistage” or “cascade ” pressuriza- tion technique has traditionally been applied based on oflanded or intuitive guesswork. A recent ASHRAE research paper established a quantita- tive relationship betw
3、een a room Spressurization ratio and its air leakage flows. As a further development, the focus ofthis paper is to explore this quantitative approach in theJielci of multistage pressurizations. A simplijed case study demon- strates the detailed procedures for arranging supply, return, and exhaust ai
4、rstreams for rooms under various requiredpres- surization levels. INTRODUCTION To design a controlled or critical environment (CCE) such as a cleanroom, biosafety lab, hospital isolation room, or even a smoke control space, design engineers may realize that the pressurization (or depressurization) i
5、s always one of the most important considerations of the entire HVAC designs. Design- ing pressurization for a single room could be simple; however, the task of designing a space consisting of multiple rooms under staged pressurization levels is much more complicated. Design engineers often assume t
6、hat if a room is to have more entering air (supply) than leaving air (return and exhaust), the room will be pressurized. This is true, but further questions of how much more supply air and what the resulting pressure differential across the room will be remain uncertain. Due to lack of engineering-b
7、ased criteria, engineers often have no choice but to intuitively pick some numbers to complete a project. As a result, many CCE spaces do not function well as intended. Room airtightness, a key element in the relationship between the airstreams enteringlleaving the space and the resulting pressure d
8、ifferential, is often ignored. Poorly designed pressurization could become unpredictable, unsta- ble, or even fail to perform. For applications where product quality or personal safety is critical, unreliable or malfunctio- ing pressurization is unacceptable. A recent ASHRAE study (Sun 2002) has pro
9、posed a quantitative approach to estimate the room pressurization ratio based on a rooms leakage rate and a required pressure differ- ence across the room shell. That paper provided simplified engineering methods to substitute current offhanded approaches. As a further development, the goal of this
10、article is to establish a quantitative approach for multiple rooms under staged pressurizations. A controlled or critical environment (CCE) is an indoor space where precision controls of indoor temperature, humid- ity, and airflow direction can be achieved. Pressurization is normally either to direc
11、t desired flow patterns or to isolate air cross-contamination. It is defined as a technique that air pres- sure differences are created mechanically between rooms to introduce intentional air movement paths through room leak- age openings. This is achieved by arranging controlled volumes of supply,
12、return, and exhaust airstreams to each room within the space. These openings could be either desig- nated, such as doorways, or undesignated, such as air gaps around door frames or other cracks. Wei Sun is a principal and chief mechanical engineer with Engsysco, Inc., Ann Arbor, Mich. 02004 ASHRAE.
13、759 BACKGROUND The interaction between the airtightness condition and pressurization level in a room is a complex phenomenon. A methodology to describe pressurization quantitatively should be based on the most critical variables; other less critical or minor influences can be included in the forms o
14、f correction and/or safety factors. We start with a simple model, where a multiple-room space is at the same floor level so that the influence of stack effect can be ignored. If all rooms are located in an interior zone, the only driving force causing air movement and pres- sure difference is a mech
15、anical device, if there is no tempera- ture or humidity difference across each room shell. However, if a subject space is a high space, located at an exterior zone, or has large temperaturehumidity differences with respect to adjacent rooms, then a correction factor needs to be included for each oft
16、hese influences (ASHRAE 1999). Some key equa- tions in Suns article (2002) will be summarized and listed below as the basis for exploring the multistage pressurizations. Airflow Through Leakage Openings The power law equation is commonly used to describe air leakage through irregular cracks, such as
17、 gaps around door- frames (ASHRAE 200 I). With numerical approximation ofits flow exponent (Sherman and Dickerhoff 1998; Sun ZOOZ), it can be simplified as Q = C (AP) O.” = 51.8 ELA (AP) Oxis (I-P) (14 or Q = C (hp) O.” = I O50 ELA (AP) (SI) (1b) where Q = volumetric flow rate, cfm (L/s); AP = press
18、ure drop across opening, in. of water (Pa); C = flow coefficient, cfni/(in. of water)” (UsPa”); O. 65 = numerically averaged flow exponent, dimensionless; ELA The leakage rate of each crack is therefore characterized by its Q-AP relationship with various C or ELA values. The ELA data tables for buil
19、ding components can be found in ASHRAE Handbook-Fundamentals (2001) and ASHRAE Handbook-HVAC Applications (1 999). These data were obtained as statistical averages among many tests, although the airtightness condition of each room heavily depends on its components manufacturing quality and installat
20、ion work- manship. If a wall has several openings, then each opening area can be consolidated to have a combined ELA value (ASHRAE 1999). Another way to estimate existing room leakage is to use a “blower test” as defined by ASTM standard 1988. Cor ELA can be calculated fi-om the test result. Procedu
21、res to obtain ELA values are not included in this paper. For a space consist- = effective leakage area, in2 (m2). FAN EXHAUST FW r - CEILING 1 I G. .na V/)LVE utin VOLUME TRK!SUG . mjo BU IL D I N P,=O.Ol (2.5 Pa) Figure 2 Case study-space conjguration. each of these influences (stack effect, infilt
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