Just to add complexity to your seemingly easy question:
I think you need to review why you need 60 fpm across two open doors. The following are the points of concern:
- This means you would need 2,150 cfm more supply than exhaust.
- Assuming there is no exhaust, the room air exchange rate is 48 air changes per hour. A typical lab is 6-12 ACH (with exceptions for clean rooms and labs with hoods in smaller rooms, etc.).
- Assuming there is no exhaust, you have 6.7 cfm per square foot of supply air to the room. The typical value for space air conditioning is 1 cfm per square foot. Laboratories might see on the order of 2-3 cfm per square foot.
- If you have a hood in the room, it could have difficulty passing certification due to the amount of air being supplied, resulting in high drafts at the hood face.
- One of the two doors will never close, even with the closer set to its strongest closing force – unless there is a large alternate leakage pathway.
When you have a chance, please clarify why there is a design criterion of 60 fpm across two open doors.