About this courseThe heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) system is one of the more complex systems installed in a structure and is responsible for a substantial portion of the total structure energy use.
Right-sizing of an HVAC system is the selection of equipment and the design of the air distribution system to meet the accurate predicted heating and cooling loads of the structure.
Right-sizing the HVAC system begins with an accurate understanding of the heating and cooling loads on a space; however, a full HVAC design involves more than just the load estimate calculation; the load calculation is the first step of the iterative HVAC design procedure.
This strategy guideline discusses the information needed to design the air distribution system to deliver the proper amount of conditioned air to a space.
This course is not a procedural step-by-step set of instructions on duct design and air distribution, but rather a guideline to the considerations for duct design in an energy-efficient structure.
Topics:
HVAC System Performance Criteria
Temperature Mixing and Uniformity
Volume and Pressure of Air
Ductwork Materials and Configuration
Supply and Return Outlets
Impact on Uniformity
Throw, Spread, and the Coanda effect
System Noise Reduction
Integrated Design
Design Principles
Pressure Drop
Room-by-Room Supply Requirements
Return Air Design
Duct Layout and Sizing
Intended Audience: primarily for mechanical, facilities, civil, construction, chemical, and other engineers who may deal with HVAC and air flow within the parameters of their job.
Publication Source: US Dept. of Energy
This course includes:
schedule3 hours on-demand content
signal_cellular_altBeginner level
task_altNo preparation required
calendar_todayPublished At Apr 29, 2022
workspace_premiumCertificate of completion
calendar_todayUpdated At May 3, 2022