ASHRAE OR-16-C026-2016 Fouling of Membrane-Based Energy Recovery Ventilators by Aerosols.pdf
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1、 Amin Engarnevis is a PhD candidate in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC. Ryan Huizing is director of research and development at dPoint Technologies, Vancouver, BC. Fouling of Membrane-Based Energy Recovery Ventilators by Aerosols Amin Engarnevi
2、s Ryan Huizing, P.Eng. Ali Vaseghi Student Member ASHRAE Student member ASHRAE Sheldon Green, PhD, P.Eng. Steven Rogak, PhD, P.Eng. Member ASHRAE ABSTRACT Membrane-based Energy Recovery Ventilators (ERV) are an effective means of reducing energy cost and allow for scaling down HVAC equipment. Owing
3、to their compact geometry and rough surfaces of the porous membrane substrate, ERV exchanger cores can be fouled by airborne particulate matter. In this study, the influence of particulate fouling on the membrane-based ERVs was investigated via accelerated material- and core-level fouling experiment
4、s. The core-level experiments, inside an Aerosol Wind Tunnel (AWT), investigated the effect of dust accumulation on the performance of cross-flow cores (including sensible and latent effectiveness, and pressure drop) through comparing pre- and post-fouling performance tests of two core samples. The
5、influence of the membrane surface exposed to particle-laden air, and core face velocity were considered during AWT tests. We have found that for solid particles of 0.310 m, deposition fractions to membrane surfaces range from 0.05 at high air velocities (1 m/s (197 fpm) to as high as 0.2 at lower ai
6、r velocities (0.5 m/s (98 fpm). Nevertheless, accelerated fouling tests using coarse, dry test dust (ISO A3 medium), did not show any significant degradation to the sensible and latent effectiveness of the cores. In the lack of proper filtration, however, this fouling may result in an energy penalty
7、 because of the added pressure drop in the system. Additionally, a mass transport analysis is presented to explain the results of AWT tests. In the material-level experiments, the effects of fouling with nano particles on the membrane material performance (including water vapor transport, gas cross-
8、over, and pressurized air leakage) were examined. Preliminary results show that deposition of non-hygroscopic graphite particles has minimal influence on the membrane, whilst deposition of soluble NaCl particles on the uncoated porous surface of the membrane may result in partial pore blockage, cons
9、equently reducing the water vapor permeation through the membrane up to 15% of the initial value. INTRODUCTION Energy required for air conditioning accounts for about 40% of the primary energy consumption in the building sector. It is thus important to recycle the energy (i.e. heat and moisture reco
10、very) used to condition the indoor air. Counter- and cross-flow air-to-air exchangers for heat and moisture (known as “Energy Recovery Ventilators”, ERV) allow increased fresh air supply with a low energy penalty because the incoming fresh air is partially conditioned by the ERV. It is shown that us
11、ing membrane-based ERVs (mERV) can result in significant energy savings when the latent load constitutes to a large fraction of the total thermal load in the HVAC system, as well as improvement of indoor air quality (IAQ) and comfort in buildings (Zhang 2012). Membranes used for mERVs must be highly
12、 permeable and selective for water vapor over other gases and contaminants. This is of practical importance for mERV exchanger to prevent crossover of undesirable gasses and contaminants from the exhaust air to the supplied fresh air (Huizing et al. 2015), (AHRI 2013). One cost-effective method of f
13、abricating membranes for mERVs is applying a very thin (1m) selective film layer onto a micro-porous substrate layer. The resultant membrane has an asymmetric composite structure. The substrate is made from a low cost, widely available porous polymer providing mechanical integrity and facilitating w
14、ater vapor transport through the membrane; the coating is a dense, hydrophilic film layer that provides the true selective barrier. The membranes have not undergone many years of field testing, yet there are preliminary indications that water vapor transport might degrade after use, possibly as the
15、result of exposure to air pollution, or other environmental stresses (Woods, 2014). Deposition of aerosol particles on membrane surfaces may result in degradation of water vapor permeability due to partial pore blockage of the porous substrate, or failure of the dense layer when aerosols are water s
16、oluble or chemically active. There are many studies of porous membrane fouling from liquids (e.g. reverse osmosis) and gases (e.g. micro- and ultra-filtration), but, we have found only one study for composite membranes in HVAC-relevant conditions. (Charles firstly, experiments comprising deposition
17、fraction measurements, loading tests, and initial and post-fouling performance measurements were conducted to investigate the fouling problem in the core level. The second step was focused on material-level examination of membrane fouling with nano particles and changes to physical properties of mem
18、brane material fouled by particulate matter. EXPERIMENTAL METHODOLOGY Core-Level Experiments Test Apparatus. An Aerosol Wind Tunnel (AWT) was developed based on the requirements of ASHRAE standard 52.2 (ASHRAE 2012) to study particulate fouling behavior and performance variations of full ERV cores u
19、nder accelerated fouling tests. Figure 1 (a) shows a schematic of the test apparatus. (a) Schematic illustration of Aerosol Wind Tunnel (AWT) (b) Photograph of custom-built aerosol generator Figure 1 Experimental Test Rig Inlet airflow is passed through a HEPA filter to remove pre-existing particles
20、 from supply air. Particles of known properties are introduced into the wind tunnel, and passed through a special test section that holds ERV cores. This test section is designed to work with two airstreams to simulate the real operating conditions of ERVs in HVAC systems (ASHRAE Standard 84 (ASHRAE
21、 2013). Primary (S,i S,o) and secondary (E,i E,o) airstreams are considered as the representatives of fresh air from outdoor and stale air from indoor space, respectively. The flow rate of both airstreams and the temperature of the primary air stream can be controlled between 0.03-0.3 m3/s (65-600 c
22、fm), and 25-80C (77-177F), respectively. Poly-disperse particles are generated by means of a fluidized-bed aerosol generator (TSI model 3400A) via dispersing dry powders of standard test dusts. After the flow has fully developed and uniformly mixed with particles, size-resolved concentrations in the
23、 air up- and down-stream of the test section are determined using a TSI Optical Particle Sizer (OPS 3330). In order to simulate the accelerated fouling conditions, very high concentrations of particles (up to 150 mg/m3 at 0.094 m3/s (200 cfm) can be injected into the primary airstream using a custom
24、-built aerosol generator (Figure 1 (b). Measurement of high concentrations is conducted using a TSI DUSTTRAK DRX. Fouling Test Procedures. The test procedures for deposition fraction measurements and dust loading tests were similar to that described in ASHRAE 52.2 standard for testing the efficiency
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