March 2012 |
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Public Input Sought on Alternative to ASHRAE Standard 62.1 Ventilation Rate Procedure Proposed
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ATLANTA – A proposed change to the ventilation rate procedure in
ASHRAE’s indoor air quality standard is open for review after changes
were made based on public input last year.
ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 62.1-2010, Ventilation for Acceptable Indoor Air
Quality, sets minimum ventilation rates and other requirements for
commercial and institutional buildings.
The ventilation rate procedure provides a prescriptive method for
determining minimum ventilation requirements. It accounts for pollutant
sources from both the building and its occupants, and allows the
designer to account for the efficiency of different ventilation systems
when delivering outdoor air to the breathing zone.
Proposed addendum f was first released for public comment in September
2011 after some users of Standard 62.1 indicated the ventilation rate
procedure was “too complicated,” according to Standard 62.1 chair Roger
Hedrick. He said the 62.1 committee agreed that application of the
multiple-zone recirculating system equations described in Section 6.2.5
and Appendix A can be complex.
“When designing multiple zone recirculating ventilation systems, Table
6-3 provides a default value of Ventilation Efficiency (Ev) based on
the largest value of the zone primary (Zp) outdoor air fraction, for
all the zones served by the system,” he said. “However, if Max (Zp)
exceeds 0.55, then Appendix A must be used to design the system outdoor
airflow. Addendum f attempts to simplify the design process by
providing a simplified default approach for cases with Max (Zp) greater
than 0.55.”
The earlier review draft set the default value of the zone primary
outdoor air fraction based on a default minimum zone primary airflow
set as 30 percent of the zone design primary airflow.
“The public review comments pointed out that this formulation did not
work mathematically under certain conditions,” Hedrick said. “This new
public review version instead simply allows Ev to be set to 0.6, unless
a higher value is provided by Table 6-3 or by using Appendix A.
Use of a relatively low value of Ev will result in higher outdoor
airflow rates, but using the default will simplify the system design
process.”
Also open for review is addendum i, which would add limits for low
humidity. Recent studies have shown that excessively low humidity may
result in unacceptable indoor air quality. The Standard 62.1 committee
is interested in the appropriateness of the relative humidity limit and
the climate zones where the requirement applies. The addendum is
open for an advisory public review, meaning comments received allow for
constructive input and need not be resolved or formally acted on by the
project committee.
In addition to addenda f and i, three additional addenda are open for
public review from March 23 until April 22. For more information, visit
www.ashrae.org/publicreviews. They are:
• Addendum h –Table 6-1, includes ventilation rates
for “Sports arena (play area)” and “Gym, stadium (play area).” Both
space types have ventilation rates based on floor area only, the per
person rate is zero. Users of the standard have expressed interest in
applying demand controlled ventilation to these space types, which is
effectively prohibited by the lack of a per person component to the
ventilation rate. This proposed addendum replaces both of these space
types with “Gym, Sports Arena (play area)”, with Rp = 20 cfm/person and
Ra = 0.06 cfm/ft² and assigns this new space type with an air class of
2 rather than class 1 from the first publication public review
version.
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• Addendum k adds an exception to the recirculation
limits on Class 4 exhaust airstreams from laboratory hoods which would
allow use of heat wheel energy recovery in some cases. The
exception defines several criteria which the airstream must meet before
such heat recovery can be used, and the heat recovery system must limit
recirculation airflow to less than 0.5 percent of the outdoor air
intake flow.
• Addendum l adds a refrigerated warehouse space type
to Table 6-1, providing revised ventilation rates for these spaces.
These rates include a “People Outdoor Air Rate, Rp” which will require
ventilation during periods of expected occupancy, but do not include an
“Area Outdoor Air Rate, Ra” which will allow the ventilation rate to be
zero for refrigerated warehouses with no occupants.
In addition, addendum j is open for public review from March 23 until
May 7. The proposed addendum would add requirements to the Indoor Air
Quality Procedure (IAQP) for determining minimum ventilation rates
which require consideration of the combined effects of multiple
contaminants of concern on individual organ systems. This “additive”
effect is already implicit in the Ventilation Rate Procedure. This
proposed change is intended to improve the IAQP by requiring
consideration of these additive effects that are well established in
the literature for many organ systems, according to Hedrick.
ASHRAE, founded in 1894, is a building technology society with more
than 50,000 members worldwide. The Society and its members focus on
building systems, energy efficiency, indoor air quality, refrigeration
and sustainability within the industry. Through research, standards
writing, publishing and continuing education, ASHRAE shapes tomorrow’s
built environment today.
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