Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
APPLICATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY:
- Laboratory Fume Hoods
ADVANTAGES:
- Up to 75% energy savings over current fume hood systems
- Allows use of small HVAC systems
- Avoids expensive control systems required by VAV fume hoods
ABSTRACT: Fume hoods, used to protect the user from breathing harmful chemical vapors, consume large amounts of energy, estimated to be 1GW in California alone. This power load comes from the fan power need to move air out the hood, and to condition make-up air.
Helmut Feustel at Berkeley Lab has developed a promising new low-flow method that reduces this energy load in fume hoods, while still protecting workers’ health. This new constant air volume system can reduce a laboratory’s energy consumption and peak-power requirements for fan and make-up air conditioning energy. Because of this reduced make-up air requirement, air-conditioning equipment can also be downsized, which reduces initial equipment costs and space requirements for the air handler and the ductwork. The new Berkeley Lab fume hood also does not require the expensive control systems used to regulate air flow in VAV fume hoods.
STATUS: U. S. Patent #6,089,970, #6,428,408 and other patents pending. Available for licensing.
REFERENCE NUMBER: IB-1205, 1473, 1593
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