Airflow and thermal guidelines

er0senin

Well-Known Member
How well do you know your ventilation system?

If we try to 160m3 / h variant of the formula (described in more detail in the quote below):

Q = qv * d * cp * (thaw-tr)
400W = (160m3 / h / 3600 s/ h) m3 / s * 1.2 kg/m3 * 1000J/kg/K * (thaw-tr) K
400W / (160/3) (J) / (s) / K = 7.5 K temperature difference.

If you have a 20 ° C on air flowing in 27.5 ° C will be the temperature in the culture, which of course is fine.:bigjoint:
If you have 25 ° C, the temperature in your garden will be 32.5 ° C which is more problematic for a single culture, but something that can be beneficial for some advanced techniques.

With the larger the fan, the difference is 3.25 ° C

Now the temperatures will of course depend on more than just the fan, lamp and the total air change rate :wall: but it can at least provide some guidance, from which one can try things out.

This is very good if you want to calculate how large / many fans you need to lower the temperature to a certain degree.
To know how much air you can employ to get the desired temperature, you can use the following formula to figure it out.:eyesmoke:

Q = qv * d * cp * (thaw-tr)

Q = heat output of your lights in W
qv = air flow in m3 / s
d = air density = 1.2 kg/m3
cp = the specific heat capacity (of the air) = 1000 J / kg / K
thaw = desired air temperature
tr = room temperature: the intake air
qv's what you want, so we re-package the formula a bit :wall::wall:

qv = Q / (d * CP * (thaw tr))

Example:

You have a 400W HPS, that is Q = 400
For example you wish that you have 25 degrees in the culture, thaw = 25
Let’s say the temperature in your room is 20 degrees, tr = 20

qv = 400 / (1.2 * 1000 * (25-20)) = 0.067 m3 / s (cubic meters per second)

Take that times 1000 and you have the flow in liters / s

Thus 0.067 * 1000 = 67 l / s

If you count m3 / t, it should look something like this 0.067 * 3600 = 241.2 m3 / h
Or if you prefer cfm (Cubic Feet per Minute) take 1.7 cfm per each m3 / t, so 241.2 / 1.7 = 141.9 cfm.

And now that you know the air flow you need you can start watching for the great fans bongsmilie;-)
 
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