30
Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

Fan Selection Criteriaand

Efficiencyby

John Magill

Page 2: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

The Air Movement and Control The Air Movement and Control Association International (AMCA), has Association International (AMCA), has met the standards and requirements of met the standards and requirements of the Registered Continuing Education the Registered Continuing Education Providers Program. Credit earned on Providers Program. Credit earned on completion of this program will be completion of this program will be reported to the RCEPP. A certificate of reported to the RCEPP. A certificate of completion will be issued to each completion will be issued to each participant. As such, it does not include participant. As such, it does not include content that may be deemed or content that may be deemed or construed to be an approval or construed to be an approval or endorsement by NCEES or RCEPP.endorsement by NCEES or RCEPP.

Page 3: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

Learning Objectives

• List available fan typesList available fan types• Know fan characteristics that are requiredKnow fan characteristics that are required• Understand tradeoffs when selecting a fanUnderstand tradeoffs when selecting a fan• Define fan efficiencyDefine fan efficiency

Page 4: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

4

Outline

Fan Types Basic Fan Curve Applications Performance Characteristics

Fan Selection Efficiency, low noise, size, space and cost

considerations Mechanical considerations for a given application

including balancing and vibration levels, construction, arrangements, ruggedness, spark resistance, corrosion resistance, high temperature resistance, bearings, motors, drives etc.

Page 5: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

5

Page 6: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

6

Basic Fan Types

Centrifugal Backward Inclined Airfoil-blade Backward Inclined Flat-blade Forward Curved Blade Radial Blade Radial Tip

Axial Propeller / Panel Fan Tubeaxial Vaneaxial

Special Designs Power Roof Ventilators Tubular Inline Centrifugal Mixed Flow Plenum/ Plug

Page 7: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

7

Centrifugal:Backward Inclined Airfoil-Blade

Name is derived from the “airfoil” shape of blades Developed to provide high efficiency Used on large HVAC and clean air industrial systems

where energy savings are of prime importance

Page 8: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

8

Centrifugal:Backward Inclined or Curved Flat-Blade

Backward inclined or curved blades are single thickness or “flat” Efficiency is only slightly less than airfoil blade Similar characteristics as airfoil blade Same HVAC applications as airfoil blade Also for industrial applications where airfoil blade is not

acceptable because of corrosive or erosive environment

Page 9: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

9

Backward Inclined or Curved Flat & Airfoil-Blade

High volume at moderate pressure

Non-overloading power characteristic

Stable performance characteristic

Low noise

Page 10: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

10

Centrifugal: Forward Curved Blade

Blades are curved forward in the direction of rotation

Must be properly applied to avoid unstable operation

Less efficient than Airfoil and Backward Inclined

Requires the lowest speed of any centrifugal to move a given amount of air

Used for low pressure HVAC systems Clean air and high temperature

applications Typically smallest size selection Rising power overloading

characteristic

Page 11: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

11

Centrifugal: Radial Blade

The blades are ‘radial’ to the fan shaft Generally the least efficient of the

centrifugal fans For material handling and moderate to

high pressure industrial applications, rugged construction

Low volume at high pressure Large wheel diameter for a given volume-

higher cost Material handling, self cleaning Easy to maintain Rising Power overloading characteristic Suitable for dirty airstream, high pressure,

high temperature and corrosive applications

Page 12: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

12

Centrifugal: Radial Tip

The blades are radial to the fan shaft at the outer extremity of the impeller, but gradually slope towards the direction of wheel rotation

More efficient than the radial blade but less than backward inclined

Offers wear resistance in mildly erosive air streams

Page 13: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

13

Axial: Propeller or Panel Fan One of the most basic fan designs For low pressure, high volume applications Often used for ventilation through a wall Available in square panel or round ring fan Maximum efficiency is reached near free delivery Reversible blade for reversible flow applications like jet

tunnel fans Many axial fans can overload at shutoff

Page 14: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

14

Tubeaxial Fan

More efficient than the panel fan Cylindrical housing fits closely to outside diameter of blade tips For low to medium pressure ducted HVAC systems Also used in some low pressure industrial applications Performance curve sometimes includes a dip to the left of peak

pressure which should be avoided

Page 15: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

15

Vaneaxial Fan

Highest efficiency axial fan Cylindrical housing fits closely to outside diameter of blade tips The straightening vanes allow for greater efficiency and pressure

capabilities For medium to high pressure HVAC systems. More compact than

centrifugal fans of same duty Aerodynamic stall causes the performance curve to dip to the left of

peak pressure which should be avoided. However anti-stall options available for both unidirectional and reversible axials

Page 16: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

16

Power Roof Ventilators

A variety of backward inclined centrifugal wheels or axial impeller designs

Also available in upblast damper design to discharge air away from the building

For low pressure exhaust systems of all building types (roof mounted)

Page 17: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

17

Inline Centrifugal FanCylindrical housing is similar to a vaneaxial fanWheel is generally an airfoil or backward inclined typeHousing does not fit close to outer diameter of wheelFor low and medium pressure HVAC systems or industrial

applications when an inline housing is geometrically more convenient than a centrifugal configuration

Page 18: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

18

Mixed Flow Fan Specific Speed between a centrifugal and axial fan Cylindrical housing is similar to a vaneaxial fan High volume advantages of axial fans Low sound, high efficiency advantages of tubular

centrifugal fans

Page 19: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

19

PLENUM / PLUG FAN

Housed vs plenum fan

This is basically a centrifugal wheel and inlet in a frame without a scroll or housing. The ‘housing’ is the AHU box.

Offers tremendous flexibility for inlet and discharge in a AHU application

More efficient than a scroll centrifugal for high flows and low SP. All SP rise occurs in the blade passage

Wall clearance rules must be followed to avoid significant system effect losses

Page 20: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

20

SO YOU HAVE ALL THESE CHOICES OF FANS TYPES AVAILABLE…WHAT SHOULD YOU DO TO PICK THE RIGHT FAN FOR YOUR APPLICATION?

Let’s consider a couple of examples to illustrate the selection process from an efficiency, sound, cost and available space perspective

All Air tests based on AMCA std 210, and Sound tests based on AMCA std 300

Page 21: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

21

Page 22: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

22

Page 23: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

23

Type Dia (in) Spd (rpm) BHP SE % (Static Efficiency)

LwiA (Inlet Sound Power ‘A’)

1 Forward Curved- SW (Centrifugal)

30 476 5.09 61.7 89

2 Backward Airfoil – SW (Centrifugal)

36.5 650 3.82 80.0 77

3 Plenum 33 800 4.25 74.0 80

4 Tubular Mixed Flow

27 1074 4.48 70.2 81

5 Tubular Vane Axial

28 1438 4.77 65.9 86

6 Propeller (Axial)

30 1998 4.92 54.4 103

All fans selected at peak SE (Static Efficiency) for Airflow=10,000 cfm, Static Pressure (SP)~2 iwc

Page 24: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

24

LESS COST

In general, for all fan types, as first cost goes down, operating costs (BHP) and noise go up…trade off!

MORE NOISY

LESS EFFICIENT

FT-1

FT-1

Narrowing in after main Fan Type Selection..........

Page 25: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

25

Tone at Blade Pass Frequency (Blade Tone)

Blade Pass Frequency, bpf= #blades * rpm / 60 Sound Power level, Lw, at bpf is a distinct audible tone. This

aerodynamic tone can be very annoying and is usually the worst for radial bladed fans, followed by plenums and housed centrifugals.

Axial fans have a high pitched tone which is not as annoying. The bpf tone is a spike in Lw over the surrounding broadband

noise spectra. Blade Tone Prominence is defined as the dominant energy level

of the blade tone integrated over a narrowband region of the sound spectrum surrounding the blade tone.

Page 26: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

26

Blade Tone prominence

Acoustic Engineers do not like blade tone prominence to exceed 6dB in addition to low Sound Power Levels (Lw)

FT-2

FT-2

Page 27: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

27

Fan Selection based on Specific Speed

Dimensional Specific Speed, is the fan speed required to raise the SP by 1 iwc with 1 cfm airflow.

Ns = N * (Q)^0.5/(SP)^0.75Where, N = Speed (rpm)

Q = Airflow (cfm) SP = Static pressure (iwc) Density = 0.075 lbm/cu ft

Page 28: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

28

Page 29: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

29

Type Specific Speed, Ns

Max Static Efficiency (SE%)

1 Forward Curved-SW (Centrifugal)

26,300 61

2 Backward Airfoil-SW (Centrifugal)

40,000 80

3 Plenum 50,000 75

4 Tubular Mixed Flow 65,800 70

5 Tubular Vane Axial 90,000 65

6 Propeller (Axial) 126,000 59

All fans selected at peak SE (Static Efficiency) for Specific Speed, Ns

Page 30: Fan Selection Criteria and Efficiency by John Magill

30

Summary

Fan selection is not a trivial process for a given application. Example shown applies to one design operating point. The

selections will change for other operating points. There is no magic fan that will result in least cost, best efficiency

and low noise for a wide range of operating points. Compromises should be well understood upfront. Direct Drive (DD) selection speeds may further limit selections.

Varying width options can optimize DD selections. Mechanical design requirements like balancing and vibration

levels, spark and high temp resistance, corrosion resistance, arrangements, motors, bearings, drives can further challenge the selection process.