This document discusses psychrometrics and human comfort. It defines key terms like dry bulb temperature, wet bulb temperature, dew point temperature, relative humidity, humidity ratio, specific enthalpy, and specific volume. It explains how a psychrometric chart relates these properties and can be used to model air state changes. The document also discusses factors that influence human comfort like temperature, moisture content, air movement, cleanliness and ventilation. It describes how heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying can be used to control the air conditions and maintain a comfortable environment for humans.
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This document discusses psychrometrics and human comfort. It defines key terms like dry bulb temperature, wet bulb temperature, dew point temperature, relative humidity, humidity ratio, specific enthalpy, and specific volume. It explains how a psychrometric chart relates these properties and can be used to model air state changes. The document also discusses factors that influence human comfort like temperature, moisture content, air movement, cleanliness and ventilation. It describes how heating, cooling, humidifying and dehumidifying can be used to control the air conditions and maintain a comfortable environment for humans.
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Psychrometrics
DETERMINATION OF PHYSICAL AND THERMODYNAMIC
PROPERTIES OF GASVAPOR MIXTURES
A psychometric chart is a graph of the physical
properties of moist air at a constant pressure (often equated to an elevation relative to sea level). The chart graphically expresses how various properties relate to each other, and is thus a graphical equation of state. The thermo physical properties found on most psychometric charts are: • Dry-bulb temperature (DBT) is that of an air sample, as determined by an ordinary thermometer, the thermometer's bulb being dry. It is typically the abscissa, or horizontal axis of the graph. The SI units for temperature are Celsius; other units are Fahrenheit. • Wet-bulb temperature (WBT) is that of an air sample after it has passed through a constant-pressure, ideal, adiabatic saturation process, that is, after the air has passed over a large surface of liquid water in an insulated channel. In practice, this is the reading of a thermometer whose sensing bulb is covered with a wet sock evaporating into a rapid stream of the sample air. The WBT is the same as the DBT when the air sample is saturated with water. • Dew point temperature (DPT) is that temperature at which a moist air sample at the same pressure would reach water vapor saturation. At this saturation point, water vapor would begin to condense into liquid water fog or (if below freezing) solid hoarfrost, as heat is removed. The dew point temperature is measured easily and provides useful information, but is normally not considered an independent property. It duplicates information available via other humidity properties and the saturation curve. • Relative Humidity (RH) is the ratio of the mole fraction of water vapor to the mole fraction of saturated moist air at the same temperature and pressure. RH is dimensionless, and is usually expressed as a percentage. Lines of constant RH reflect the physics of air and water: they are determined via experimental measurement. Note: the notion that air "holds" moisture, or that moisture dissolves in dry air and saturates the solution at some proportion, is an erroneous (albeit widespread) concept Humidity Ratio (also known as Moisture Content, Mixing Ratio, or Specific Humidity) is the proportion of mass of water vapor per unit mass of dry air at the given conditions (DBT, WBT, DPT, RH, etc.). It is typically the ordinate or vertical axis of the graph. For a given DBT there will be a particular humidity ratio for which the air sample is at 100% relative humidity: Specific Enthalpy symbolized by h, also called heat content per unit mass, is the sum of the internal (heat) energy of the moist air in question, including the heat of the air and water vapor within. In the approximation of ideal gasses, lines of constant enthalpy are parallel to lines of constant WBT. Enthalpy is given in (SI) Joules per kilogram of air or BTU per pound of air. Specific Volume, also called Inverse Density, is the volume per unit mass of the air sample. The SI units are cubic meters per kilogram of air; other units are cubic feet per pound of dry air. The versatility of the psychometric chart lies in the fact that by knowing three independent properties of some moist air (one of which is the pressure), the other properties can be determined. Changes in state, such as when two air streams mix, can be modeled easily and somewhat graphically using the correct psychometric chart for the location's air pressure or elevation relative to sea level. For locations at or below 2000 ft (600 m), a common assumption is to use the sea level psychometric chart. How to read the chart The most common chart used by practitioners and students alike is the "ω-t" (omega-t) chart in which the Dry Bulb Temperature (DBT) appears horizontally as the abscissa and the humidity ratios (ω) appear as the ordinates. In order to use a particular chart, for a given air pressure or elevation, at least two of the six independent properties must be known (DBT, WBT, RH, Humidity Ratio, Specific Enthalpy, and Specific Volume). This gives rise to 15 possible combinations. DBT : This can be determined from the abscissa DPT : Follow the horizontal line from the point where the line from the horizontal axis arrives at 100% RH, also known as the saturation curve. WBT : Line inclined to the horizontal and intersects saturation curve at DBT point. RH : Hyperbolic lines drawn asymptotically with respect to the saturation curve which corresponds to 100% RH. Humidity Ratio : Marked on Ordinate axis. Specific Enthalpy : lines of equal values, or hash marks for, slope from the upper left to the lower right. Specific Volume : Equally spaced parallel family of lines. Human comfort Inevitably 'comfort' is a very subjective matter. The Engineer aims to ensure 'comfort' for most people found from statistical surveys .Most people (90%) are comfortable when the air temperature is between 18-22°C and the %sat is between 40-65%. This zone can be shown on the psychometric chart. And is known as the comfort zone. Outside air is quite likely to be at a different condition from the required comfort zone condition. In order to bring its condition to within the comfort zone we may need to do one or more of the following:-heat it; cool it; dehumidify it; humidify it; or mix it.
• HUMAN COMFORT CONTROL
• A human being is sensitive to impurities such as dust, smoke, & pollen that cause irritation to the nose, lungs, & eyes, Thus there is a need for clean air. • A human being also requires fresh air to renew oxygen supply as well as to dilute undesirable odors. • Due to these reasons some properties of the air must be adjusted which are essential to provide a comfortable & healthful environment. • Temperature- by cooling or heating. • Moisture content -by humidifying or dehumidifying. • Movement -by circulation • Cleanliness -by filtration • Ventilation- by recalculating fresh air to replace stale air. • COMFORTABLE ENVIRONMENT FOR HUMANS : • Comfortable environment for humans Human body adjusts to the temperature changes of its surrounding .Inside temperature of human body, known as subsurface temperature is 37 degree c.(98.6 F) Temperature at the skin surface is about 21 degree c.(70 F.) • If surrounding temperature adjacent to skin, Is more than skin surface temperature we fill hot, If less we fill cold. • When cold, nerve send the signal to brain to close the pores tightly, When hot, nerve send the signal to brain to open the pores causing to release the liquid from skin, which in turn maintains the temperature of skin surface by evaporation, to feel comfortable. • A balance is thus maintained so that deep tissue heat should not deviate more than one degree Fahrenheit, However this does not means one is always comfortable, as out side tissues always come across these variable conditions which results in discomfortable feelings to human being. • WHAT IS AIR CONDITIONING : • Air conditioning is the process by which • AIR IS COOLED OR HEATED. • CLEANED OR FILTERED. • CIRCULATED OR RECIRCULATED. • CONTROL THE QUALITY & QUANTITY • This means by air conditioning system the temperature, humidity & volume of air can be controlled at any time in any situation. FUNCTIONS OF HVAC • CONTROL OF AIR TEMPERATURE. • CONTROL OF MOISTURE CONTENT IN THE AIR. • PROPER AIR MOVEMENT. • TO HOLD THE AIR CONTAMINATION WITHIN ACCEPTABLE LIMITS.