Unstable Operating Ranges Of A Fan And Non-Achievable Quantity Ranges Of Airways In A Ventilation System

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
S. Lin
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
462 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1996

Abstract

Fan stall is a notorious phenomenon with axial-flow fans. When multiple fans of this type serve a ventilation system, their mutual impacts are very complicated and not well understood. Results from laboratory experiments indicated that the immediate consequence of a fan working across its stall zone (i.e., the pronounced trough on the fan characteristic curve) is that some branches in the system may suffer abrupt and even drastic changes in air quantity and pressure. The quantity range of the fan that causes the abrupt change is called an unstable operating range. The corresponding quantity range of a branch is called a non-achievable quantity range of the branch because any quantity within this range cannot be achieved without changing some parameters of the ventilation system (e.g., branch resistances). These concepts are introduced based on the test results from tubing networks to bring attention to these important characteristics of ventilation systems.
Citation

APA: S. Lin  (1996)  Unstable Operating Ranges Of A Fan And Non-Achievable Quantity Ranges Of Airways In A Ventilation System

MLA: S. Lin Unstable Operating Ranges Of A Fan And Non-Achievable Quantity Ranges Of Airways In A Ventilation System. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1996.

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