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Dilution Ventilation Calc - Sanity Check

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Engineer6512

Mechanical
Nov 4, 2002
67
I'm calculating required outdoor air for a vehicle test facility where the vehicles will be running continuously in the space. Here are my calcs - please feel free to comment on anything I might be missing.

CO is the dominant contaminant. Allowable max concentration is 29 mg/m3.

CO generation rate: 11.67 g/min = 11670 mg/min
4 vehicles running: 4 * 11670 = 46680 mg/min
(source ASHRAE applications, chp. 13, table 6 avg of winter emmissions)

Molecular weight, CO: 28
Moles CO per mg: = 0.001/28 = 3.57E-05 mol/mg
T = 298 K
P = 1 atm
R = 0.08206 L*atm/(K*mol)
Volume CO generated per min: = 46680 * (3.57E-05 * 0.08206 * 298 / 1) * (0.001 L/m3) = 0.040768 m3/min

K = 5 (imperfect mixing)
Dilution Air: V = (G/C)*K = (0.040768 m3/min / 29E-06 ppm) * 5 = 7028 m3/min ~ 250000 CFM

Did I miss something here? Or is this really the flow rate I need?

Thanks!
 
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Wouldn't it be easier and more economical to vent from the tail pipe directly?
 
Thanks for the reply, but the vehicles are actually being driven, not stationary... sorry forgot to mention this important point.
 
You are assuming constant tailpipe CO emissions and perfect tailpipe / room air mixing. CO will be a function of engine size, rpm and load. You will buildup pockets of CO then it will mix in with room air. I believe should also look at air volume changes per hours and cfm/ft2 and these will be a function of room size. The IMC code of 1 ½ CFM/ft2 may be very short for a very small space.
 
You didn't mention the size of the space. Is this an indoor arena?
 
Hi walkes, yes its an indoor arena, but size of the space does not matter with a dilution calc... only the rate of generation and the allowable concentration, per ACGIH.

 
My main issue that I am not sure about is if I am handling the units and the conversion of CO from mg/min to a volume of gas correctly. I am using ACGIH dilution calcs as a reference, but the only examples they give are for evaporation of a liquid in pints per hour and the associated constants for that system of units. ASHRAE 62.1-2004 has basically the same equations in an appendix but again does not provide any examples.
 
Has anyone done a dilution calc of this type before?
 
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