air handling unit not working

Posted on Aug 6 2014 by Image 1 of 3 It's easy to see that this duct system is zoned because parts of the zone dampers are visible on the outside of the ducts. The green lights indicate that the zone dampers are open. Last week I wrote about what happens when you try to save energy by closing air conditioning registers in unused rooms. In the end, I recommended not doing it because you won’t save money and you may create some big problems for yourself, like freezing up the coil and killing your compressor. At the end of the article, I mentioned that zoned duct systems do close off registers, and that doing so can be OK with the right kind of equipment and design. But there’s one thing often done in zoned duct systems that’s rarely done well. Before we find out what that thing is, though, let's be precise in our language and clear up exactly what we're talking about. The word “zoning” is used in more than one way in the context of heating and air conditioning systems in a house.

First, larger houses are almost always zoned. That is, they have more than one thermostat so you can control the conditions separately in different parts of the house. In a two-story house, for example, there will probably be at least two thermostats — one upstairs and one downstairs. Is It OK to Close Air Conditioner Vents in Unused Rooms? Keeping Cool in a Two-Story House The other way that the term “zoning” is used is to describe a single duct system attached to a single HVAC(Heating, ventilation, and air conditioning). system that serves multiple zones. In most homes with forced-air HVAC systems, each thermostat is connected to its own heating and cooling system. The home is zoned, but the HVAC system is not. In a “zoned system,” a single heating and air conditioning system is controlled by multiple thermostats in multiple zones. In the photo above, the three green lights are part of three zone dampers that control the flow of air to three separate zones.

Depending on the needs of the house, any combination of one, two, or three zone dampers may be open and sending conditioned air to their respective zones.
cheap ac units nyc If only one or two of the zones are calling for air, most air handlers will create extra static pressure because one or two of the pathways are closed off.
cheap used ac window unitsEnter the bypass duct (shown in Image #2, below).
how to size home air conditioning unitWhen the system is running but not all of the zone dampers are open, the bypass duct — in theory — is supposed to relieve the extra pressure and maintain good air flow throughout the duct system. The problems with the bypass duct A few years ago at the ACI conference, I heard John Proctor and Rick Chitwood discuss the issue of bypass ducts.

Proctor isn’t a fan of zoning at all, and Chitwood is. On one point, though, they both agreed: Bypass ducts should never be used. Here are three reasons why: Throwing cold air directly into the return plenum reduces the temperature of the air coming in to be cooled. That makes the evaporator coil get colder, and the colder it gets, the less efficient it becomes. The bypass duct steals air. Even with all three zone dampers open, the bypass duct has a big pressure difference across it, and air is lazy. It'll cheat and take the path of least resistance whenever possible, in this case the bypass duct. Not only is a colder evaporator coil less efficient, it's also more likely to freeze up, as the condensation it collects eventually drops below the freezing point. (And if you think a bypass duct is bad for air flow, a frozen coil is way worse. It's really hard to push air through a solid block of ice.) Savings from eliminating the bypass Just this week, Proctor posted an article on zoning and bypass ducts on his website.

With the article, he included a video demonstration of a zoned system, showing the changes in airflow and temperatures with and without the bypass duct open. Then he performed the calculations to show the efficiency for each configuration. In his little experiment, the three configurations with the bypass duct closed (with no air through bypass) were 22%, 27%, and 32% more efficient than the configuration with the bypass duct open. Of course, if you’re sending air to only one zone, you still have the issues of reduced air flow in a PSC blower and increased energy with an ECM blower, as I described last week for the register-closing scenario. To do zoning right, you’ve got to account for the extra air when one or more zones are closed during operation. Probably the best way to do that is with a multi-stage air conditioner that can also ramp down the fan speed to send less total air through the system. My friend David Butler, one of the most accomplished HVAC designers I know, believes that bypass ducts can be done right... but it’s still best to avoid them.

"It's a tool that should only be used when [other] options aren't feasible or possible." The bottom line with zoning is that it’s a tricky business no matter which way you go. ACCA has a zoning protocol called Manual Zr, and that’s a good place to start if you’re going to design a zoned system.Check out his in-depth course, Mastering Building Science at Heatspring Learning Institute, and follow him on Twitter at @EnergyVanguard.With ever-increasing pressure to design for lower space temperatures and relative humidities, engineers are providing colder, drier supply-air streams requiring deeper cooling coils and lower chilled-water temperatures for health-care and laboratory applications. A solution often employed is a blow-through air-handling unit (AHU) with the cooling coil and high-efficiency final filters on the discharge side of the fan. With this arrangement, fan heat appears on the entering side of the cooling coil, resulting in a potentially lower supply-air temperature and a reduced air-delivery requirement.

The use of blow-through-type AHUs in hospitals and laboratories is not new. What is new are the low dry-bulb and dew-point temperatures they often are designed to achieve. The resultant operational issues require a better understanding of the physical and psychrometric processes at work, which will be explained in this article. About 30 years ago, I was just out of college, working for a consulting engineering firm in the Midwest. One day, one of the principals asked me to accompany him on a trip to investigate a problem at a local hospital. When the principal and I arrived at the hospital, the chief engineer took us to a large AHU serving a major portion of the patient-care areas, providing 100-percent outside air for makeup. The blow-through-type AHU had a large airfoil fan discharging into a target plate designed to spread air over the face of an eight-row, 12-fin-per-inch chilled-water coil located just downstream. Several feet beyond the chilled-water coil, which was discharging approximately 52°F air, was a large bank of 95-percent-efficient final filters.

Everything on the discharge side of the coil was wet. This included all of the filters in the approximately 8-ft-tall-by-16-ft-wide array, which were soaked along the sides, at the top, and at the bottom. The chief engineer wanted to eliminate the problem because the relatively expensive filters had to be changed every few weeks. My boss and the chief engineer agreed the problem likely was carryover off of the cooling coil resulting from high-velocity air being discharged from the fan and unevenly distributed across the face of the coil. (For more on carryover, see the sidebar on the next page.) My boss and I presented a proposal to study and correct the problem, but the chief engineer apparently found another way to address the issue, as we never heard from him again. Although I did not voice my concerns at the time, something about what I saw that day always bothered me. Conventional wisdom certainly pointed to carryover off of the coil as the source of the problem, but as hard as I tried, I could not see a single droplet of water coming off the face of the coil.

There was no bridging between the fins, no overflowing primary or intermediate drain pans — literally, nothing unusual. In short, I could see no evidence of carryover by studying the exit face of the coil. I was convinced that another process — one I did not yet understand — was at work. In the years that followed, I saw that phenomenon to varying degrees of severity several other times, always involving AHUs with blow-through cooling coils and downstream high-efficiency filters. In 2005, the following investigation provided an opportunity to truly understand the processes involved. Early in 2005, two identical blow-through air-handling systems (Figure 1) were installed on a medical campus as part of a multiphase project. The characteristics of the fan and cooling coils in each AHU were as follows: Fan: 54,000 cfm, 40.25-in. double-width-double-inlet (DWDI) airfoil fan; 125-hp motor with variable-speed drive. Cooling coils: Three 39-in.-by-149-in., 12-row chilled-water coils with eight mildly enhanced fins per inch;

648-gpm chilled water at 42°F; 88.1°F-dry-bulb (db), 70.6°F-wet-bulb (wb) entering air; 49°F-db design leaving air; 121.06-sq-ft total coil face area; 446-fpm average coil face velocity, with primary and intermediate drain pans. The operational problem was the wetting of the cooling-coil discharge chamber of each AHU and the soaking of all of the MERV (minimum-efficiency reporting value) 14 filters installed downstream. The physical-plant director was anxious to solve the problem because of both the cost of frequent filter changes and the possibility of mold forming in the system. A quick review of Figure 1 — specifically, the absence of a target plate on the discharge of the fan — could lead one to conclude that coil carryover was the problem. Yet the average coil face velocity was quite low: less than 450 fpm. Additionally, the fan supplied a variable-air-volume system; even during summer conditions, the fan never was seen to operate above 45 Hz (75 percent of full speed). With one of the units operating at 45 Hz, a field test was conducted to determine actual fan/coil-system performance.

For each of the three coils, face velocity was measured at 36 locations, with each location measuring approximately 1.12 sq ft. Table 1 shows raw face-velocity data. Figure 2 shows curves of constant face velocity as a percentage above and below the average face velocity. Figure 2 clearly indicates the signature left by the high-velocity fan discharge toward the top center of the coils. Interestingly, at 45-Hz operation, the four highest face velocities were 537 fpm, 484 fpm, 472 fpm, and 460 fpm, while the average face velocity was 339 fpm; at 60-Hz operation (which seemed unlikely from the loads calculated), the four highest face velocities would have been 716 fpm, 645 fpm, 629 fpm, and 613 fpm, while the average face velocity would have been 452 fpm. According to data from a manufacturer of a physically similar coil with equivalent fin character and spacing, carryover should begin to occur at approximately 615-fpm face velocity. At the normal operating condition of approximately 45 Hz, then, carryover should not have occurred.

Even at 60 Hz, carryover would have occurred at only three or four points on the coil (about 4 percent of the total face area). How, then, could the entire filter bank have become soaked? A diagnostic computer simulation was performed. First, operation with a 339-fpm average face velocity was simulated, revealing that 250 gpm of chilled water was required to maintain a 49°F supply-air temperature. Then, operation at this chilled-water flow rate, but with the face velocity altered to the highest reading of 537 fpm and the lowest reading of 194 fpm, was simulated. The results are given in Table 2. Although the psychrometrics at work were more complicated than the simulations indicated, the deep cooling coil clearly was producing different leaving-air temperatures based on the varying velocities on the coil face. Furthermore, all of the leaving conditions were at saturation. A psychrometric-chart saturation curve enhanced to make the process easier to visualize is shown in Figure 3. The mix-air humidity ratios of all adjacent air streams are in the fog region (the area to the left of the saturation curve).

Thus, the mix condition of any air stream, regardless of face velocity, would have yielded a state point consisting of saturated air and suspended water droplets, or fog. An approximate calculation indicates that for this particular test point and entering-air condition, the coil produced about 12 lb per hour of water droplets as fog. That was more than enough to cause the soaking of the filters because the water droplets could not have re-evaporated without heat having been added to the air stream. The solution was to provide reheat to the leaving-air stream. To that end, the 12-row cooling coil was replaced with a 10-row cooling coil, which load calculations indicated could easily handle the actual load, and a one-row reheat coil (Figure 4). Return chilled water from the 10-row coil was routed to the reheat coil to increase the temperature of the leaving-air stream by 1.7°F. The psychrometrics of this modification are shown in Figure 5. Because the unit may need to operate at 60 Hz in the future, a target plate was installed at the fan discharge to even the velocity distribution across the coil and prevent actual carryover.

The addition of the target plate reduced the face-velocity variation to a range of +34 percent to -32 percent. The retrofitted system was operated during the summers of 2006 and 2007 with no wetting of the final filters. Obviously, the problem was created not by the blow-through unit, but by the extremely uneven distribution of air across the face of the cooling coil. Even with a target plate installed, airflow variations of ±25 percent or more are not uncommon. A prudent designer anticipating operation at low discharge temperatures should: (1) make every effort to ensure face velocity is as uniform as possible and (2) simulate operation at flow rates at least ±25 percent of design to determine if the formation of water droplets (fog) downstream may be an issue, in which case reheat must be applied to minimally warm the exit air, moving the mix points away from the fog region above the saturation curve. The president of McClure Engineering Associates and a member of HPAC Engineering's Editorial Advisory Board, Gerald J. Williams, PE, LEED AP, has more than 30 years of experience in the design, analysis, and commissioning of building HVAC systems.