mechanicaldude
Mechanical
- Nov 10, 2006
- 42
I'm sure this has been discussed several hundred times already, but here it goes anyway. I have an existing patient room that is being redesigned to be an isolation room that only needs to be negative some of the time, the rest of the time it can act as a patient room with neutral pressurization. So it seems like my options are:
A) to provide a new HEPA filter exhaust fan with a user operated switch, when the negative pressure is needed. This way you won't have to replace or clean the HEPA filter as much if you don't run it all the time. Under neutral contditions I can return the air back to the AHU.
B) run the exhaust fan continuosly but as a two speed fan. Low speed for neutral conditions and high speed for negative conditions.
C) Or as my college suggests, keep the exhaust fan constant and vary the supply air. I'm not sure why I should do it this way. If This is done how do you meet the cooling load of the room all the time. ?
Any thoughts or ideas from your experiences would be appreciated.
Thanks.
By the way this existing AHU serving this space is a constant volume hot water reheat system.
A) to provide a new HEPA filter exhaust fan with a user operated switch, when the negative pressure is needed. This way you won't have to replace or clean the HEPA filter as much if you don't run it all the time. Under neutral contditions I can return the air back to the AHU.
B) run the exhaust fan continuosly but as a two speed fan. Low speed for neutral conditions and high speed for negative conditions.
C) Or as my college suggests, keep the exhaust fan constant and vary the supply air. I'm not sure why I should do it this way. If This is done how do you meet the cooling load of the room all the time. ?
Any thoughts or ideas from your experiences would be appreciated.
Thanks.
By the way this existing AHU serving this space is a constant volume hot water reheat system.