SpudTheDog
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I have been going through the official NCEES practice exam for HVAC. I understand the main concepts and am combing through each problem to make sure I fully understand each step. I am stumped on one portion of the following problem though:
A room in a building has the following characteristics:
Sensible heat gain = 90,000 Btu/hr
Latent heat gain = 40,000 Btu/hr
Supply air to the room = 3,600 cfm @ 55ºF db
The room is kept at 78ºF db/ 45%rh. Outdoor air conditions are 92ºF db/ 76ºF wb (h=39.4 BTU/lb). Outdoor air ventilation for the room is 700 cfm. The end goal of the problem is to find the supply wet-bulb temperature if the supply dry bulb is 55ºF. Our mixed air condition would be 80.7ºF db and 66.2ºF wb (h=30.99 BTU/lb) with the above information.
A portion of problem requires us to calculate the load of the OA entering the room. The solution manual has the load defined as a function of the mixed air temperature and OA. In other words, the test has q_t_OA = 4.5 x Q_OA x delta_h where delta_h is h_OA and h_MixedAir. I am lost as to why the system load by the OA would be impacted by the mixed condition. If we would push the example to the extreme and bring in 3,599 CFM of OA and only recirculate 1 CFM of room air, the q_t_OA load would be smaller than if we brought in less OA (assuming the enthalpy difference is between the OA and mixed air conditions as shown in the NCEES solution. Under these conditions delta_h moves closer to zero as more OA is added). Shouldn't the OA load use the enthalpy differences between the OA and room condition instead? This would mean that as more OA is added the cooling capacity on the system would also increase.
A room in a building has the following characteristics:
Sensible heat gain = 90,000 Btu/hr
Latent heat gain = 40,000 Btu/hr
Supply air to the room = 3,600 cfm @ 55ºF db
The room is kept at 78ºF db/ 45%rh. Outdoor air conditions are 92ºF db/ 76ºF wb (h=39.4 BTU/lb). Outdoor air ventilation for the room is 700 cfm. The end goal of the problem is to find the supply wet-bulb temperature if the supply dry bulb is 55ºF. Our mixed air condition would be 80.7ºF db and 66.2ºF wb (h=30.99 BTU/lb) with the above information.
A portion of problem requires us to calculate the load of the OA entering the room. The solution manual has the load defined as a function of the mixed air temperature and OA. In other words, the test has q_t_OA = 4.5 x Q_OA x delta_h where delta_h is h_OA and h_MixedAir. I am lost as to why the system load by the OA would be impacted by the mixed condition. If we would push the example to the extreme and bring in 3,599 CFM of OA and only recirculate 1 CFM of room air, the q_t_OA load would be smaller than if we brought in less OA (assuming the enthalpy difference is between the OA and mixed air conditions as shown in the NCEES solution. Under these conditions delta_h moves closer to zero as more OA is added). Shouldn't the OA load use the enthalpy differences between the OA and room condition instead? This would mean that as more OA is added the cooling capacity on the system would also increase.
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