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dedicated outdoor air

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Application and Design for The Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building Kings College Wilkes-Barre PA Ryan James Wanko Building Mechanical and Energy Systems – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: dedicated outdoor air


1
dedicated outdoor air
Application and Design for
The Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences
Building Kings College Wilkes-Barre PA
Ryan James Wanko Building Mechanical and Energy
Systems
2
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Overview
  • General Information
  • Existing Mechanical Conditions
  • Dedicated Outdoor air Design
  • Smoke Control Units
  • Plant Reductions
  • Cost Savings and Emission Reductions
  • Indoor Air Quality Issues
  • Payback Period
  • Acoustical Analysis
  • Final Comments

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3
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
General Information
  • Construction Start Date December 1997
  • Date of Completion August 1998
  • 46,000 Square Foot Addition
  • 4 stories above grade
  • 1 story partially below grade
  • Final Cost of 6,056,190
  • Budget of 6,100,000

Occupancy Types
  • Storage
  • Laboratories
  • Lecture Halls
  • Offices

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4
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Project Team Information
Quad 3 Group Joel Sims, AIA, Project
Administrator John Cowder, RA, Project
Architect Brendan Mayer, PE, Mechanical
Engineer Walter Bevilacqua, Electrical
Designer Bernard Ostrosky, PE, Plumbing Lee
Eckert, PE, Structural Engineer Sharon Lehman,
Interiors Prime Contractors General Sordoni
Construction Electric Brennan Electric HVAC
Penn State Mechanical Construction Manager
Sordoni Construction Services
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5
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Existing Mechanical Conditions
  • 100 Outdoor Air Units
  • Delivery of approximately 35,000 CFM
  • One of the 4 units is CAV
  • Remaining four are VAV in conjunction with
    Phoenix Air Valves
  • 2 110 Ton air cooled chilling units
  • 2 3753 MBH input natural gas boilers

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6
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
100 Outdoor Air Applications and Ventilation
Standards
  • 100 Outdoor Air Units will assure there to be no
    inter-space sharing of air
  • This is done through the absence of a mix box
  • Mixing is not allowed in lab spaces if it will
    transfer contaminants from space to space.
  • 100 OA units use outdoor air to satisfy
    ventilation load and all of the thermal load
  • In most cases the air required to relieve the
    entire thermal load on a space will surpass the
    amount of OA required for proper ventilation
  • ASHRAE 62-2001 will list minimum suggested OA
    rates for a given occupancy
  • Any amount of OA over the ASHRAE Std. is
    considered unvitiated or wasted in most cases
  • Exception

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Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
100 Outdoor Air Applications and Ventilation
Standards
Bad
Good
Inter-space Recirculation
Intra-space Recirculation
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8
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Dedicated Outdoor Air Can Deliver!
  • DOAS can bring in the minimal amount of outdoor
    air required (either by ASHRAE or for specific
    contaminant control) and pick up the rest of the
    thermal load with a parallel system.
  • The use of a parallel system allows DOAS to
    supply at higher temperatures (in some cases)
    thus further reducing ventilation load and over
    all chiller size

Bad
Good
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9
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Redesign Concept
Comments
  • Apply Dedicated Outdoor Air with parallel radiant
    cooling and heating to all labs, offices and
    classrooms
  • Conventional constant air volume air handler for
    corridors and basement storage spaces
  • Packaged units for stairwells as a method of
    smoke control
  • Use of parallel radiant cooling and heating will
    reduce mixing contaminants within the room
  • High induction low temp discharge for humidity
    control
  • If we want to reduce the contaminant mixing
    throughout the air, why use high induction?
  • Air mixes sooner, leaves contaminant buoyant in
    the breathable zone

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10
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Optimal Design Situation (Hybrid of Dilution
Ventilation and Local Exhaust
Hatching indicates negative pressure zones
created by exhaust. Each exhaust would be
located directly over the work station. Short
circuiting could be a problem.
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11
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Considerations and Procedures for
Dedicated Outdoor Air
  • For this analysis the ventilator units will be
    sized to meet ASHRAE 62-2001 Standard. Heat
    recovery will be used.
  • Radiant cooling panel surface temperature will be
    taken as 55F
  • Ventilator unit will be designed to maintain
    space dewpoint less than 55F
  • Indoor air quality assessment

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12
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Procedures for Dedicated Outdoor Air
(Classroom 101)
Cooling
  • Space requires 600CFM OA by ASHRAE
  • Space set point of 72F
  • Space sensible load 22,588 Btu/hr
  • Space latent load 4,800 Btu/hr
  • DOAS supply point 45F DB and sat.

Given the above information we can determine
three key pieces of information DOAS sensible
Capacity 17,496 Btu/hr Radiant Panel Capacity
5,029 Btu/hr Resulting Dewpoint 52F
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13
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Procedures for Dedicated Outdoor Air
(Classroom 101)
  • Panels rated for 55btu/(hrft2)
  • Results in a panel area of 91ft2
  • Ceiling coverage percentage of about 11

Why not supply at 52F and saturated?
The resulting dewpoint was derived by calculating
a humidity rise due to latent load. That
humidity rise is the same regardless of supply
air point. Supplying at 52 F and saturated will
result in a dewpoint above 55F.
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14
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Procedures for Dedicated Outdoor Air
(Classroom 101)
Heating
  • Heating season is calculated in similar manner
  • DOAS supply temperature of 80F was chosen
  • Condensation control is not an issue with radiant
    heat
  • Determine DOAS sensible capacity
  • Determine radiant floor required capacity

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15
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Procedures for Dedicated Outdoor Air
(Classroom 101)
Radiant floor heating on step down (secondary
hydronic loop)
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16
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Design Conclusions for Dedicated Outdoor Air
  • Overall thermally efficient
  • A few instances of over cooling and over heating
  • Those instances took place in storage (interior)
    areas
  • Over cooling could be eliminated with the use of
    a sensible reheat wheel.
  • By cooling the air to 45F and saturated and then
    sensibly reheating, we will maintain proper
    humidity ratio
  • Over heating could be solved with the use of
    terminal reheat boxes. No over heating occurred
    in critical spaces (classrooms labs offices etc.)

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17
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Use of Heat Recovery (Enthalpy Type Only)
  • By adding an enthalpy wheel we can further reduce
    cooling and heating loads
  • Counter flow type wheel
  • Cross contamination percent of .04
  • Self purging for particulate matter
  • Free pre-heating

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18
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Smoke Control Units for Stairwells (Creating a
Safe Haven)
  • Positive pressure in stairwells
  • Pressure difference of .5wg

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19
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Redesigned Plant Sizes
Existing Plant Sizes
  • 116 Tons of Cooling
  • 677.6 MBH of heating
  • 300GPM Cooling Plant
  • 70 GPM Heating Plant
  • 210 Tons of Cooling
  • 2,609 MBH of heating
  • 517GPM Cooling Plant
  • 240 GPM Heating Plant

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20
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Overall Reductions and Savings
Fan Reduction 23,336 CFM or 61.5
(.133/(cfmyr)) Cooling Plant Reduction 104
Tons or 47.3 (217.8/(tonyr)) Heating Plant
Reductions 1,931.3 MBH or 74 (54/(MBHyr)) Pump
ing Reductions 405 GPM or 52 (3.4/(Gpmyr))
At the rates given above (from HAP) we are
effectively making 130,960.05 per year with
DOAS-Radiant for our tested condition.
OR.
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21
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Overall Reductions and Savings
A brand new Porsche 911 Turbo every year and walk
home with 2760.05 change!
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22
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Reduction in on and off-site emissions
Existing
Redesigned
CO2 79,300 lb/yr SO2 486 lb/yr Nox 710
lb/yr CO 381 lb/yr Particulate 111 lb/yr
CO2 222,743 lb/yr SO2 1379.12 lb/yr Nox
2681.83 lb/yr CO 1683 lb/yr Particulate 493.144
lb/yr
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23
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Reduction in on and off-site emissions
Reduction
CO2 64.3 SO2 64.7 Nox 73.5 CO
77.3 Particulate 77.3
This building cleaned up quite nice
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24
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Indoor Air Quality Considerations
In lab type occupancies there is a good chance of
the presence of contamination sources
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25
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Indoor Air Quality Considerations
  • Dilution Ventilation
  • DOAS can be designed to bring in minimum outside
    air for IAQ
  • Internal emissions need to be known
  • Air testing required

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26
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Indoor Air Quality Considerations
Local Exhaust Ventilation
  • High level contaminants
  • Contaminants are immediately evacuated
  • No mixing

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27
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Indoor Air Quality Considerations
Local Exhaust Ventilation
  • DOAS may not supply enough make up air for
    exhaust units
  • Short circuit hoods would work in conjunction
    with stair units
  • Dampers would redirect all flow to stairwell when
    smoke detector trips

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28
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Redesign Conclusions
  • DOAS with enthalpy wheel (as proposed)
  • Correct with Sensible wheel
  • Mild over heating
  • Could work for IAQ if given proper information
  • Large plant reductions
  • Large Emission reductions
  • Large cost savings (as compared with 100 OA
    application)

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29
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Payback Analysis (Breadth Work)
DOAS-Radiant initial cost 667,584 Pays Back in
3.7 Years (Under 25 of a 15 yr mechanical life
time) Payback period is taking into account 6
interest
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30
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Acoustical Analysis for Classroom 212 (Breadth
Work)
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31
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Acoustical Analysis for Classroom 212 (Breadth
Work)
Existing Conditions
Redesigned
  • Resulting RC value 38
  • Recommended RC 35-40
  • Possible Vibrations
  • Resulting RC value 33
  • Recommended RC 35-40
  • Possible Vibrations

Corrections
Corrections
  • Acoustical Insulation
  • 2 thick fiberglass (3lb/ft3)
  • 5 coverage of common wall
  • Acoustical Insulation
  • 2 thick fiberglass (3lb/ft3)
  • 40 coverage of common wall

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32
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Final Comments
  • Switching 100 OA applications to DOAS
  • If a space requires large amounts of OA DOAS can
    supply at higher temperatures and further reduce
    plant size
  • Use of parallel system
  • Global impact
  • Cleaner Buildings
  • Cleaner Environment

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33
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Acknowledgments
Tony Shebelock P.E.(Quad 3 Group) John Cowder
R.A. (Quad 3 Group) Joseph Ballz, Facilites
Manager (Kings College) Dr. William Groves Ph.D,
C.I.H. (Penn State University) Dr. Jae-Weon Jeong
PH.D, Advisor (Penn State University) AE
Mechanical Faculty Kyle Pepperman (Graphic
Design) Family and Friends
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34
Charles E. and Mary Parente Life Sciences Building
Questions
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