General exchange exhaust ventilation systems usually remove air from the upper, less often from the middle zone of buildings. Before removal, the air in general exchange exhaust systems usually does not undergo cleaning. General exchange exhaust systems can be channelless if the air is removed by roof fans that are installed on the floors, and ducted. In ducted exhaust ventilation systems, air is sucked into air intake apertures or grilles, it is fed through the ducts to the fan and, after passing the exhaust shaft, enters the atmosphere. To protect the exhaust shaft from atmospheric precipitation, an umbrella is installed above it, and the air ducts are blocked with a flap when the fan is not working.

Local exhaust ventilation systems are designed to take harmful emissions from the places of their formation with the help of shelters or local suction, transport polluted air, clean it in filters or dust collectors and release it into the atmosphere. Local suction and shelters have the most diverse design and shape: these are umbrellas, fume hoods, full shelters, side and ring suction at baths and shaft furnaces, suction panels, casings, etc.

Many harmful substances released during technological processes actively affect local suction pipes, air ducts, fans, filters, causing their severe corrosion, in addition, they can be explosive and fire-hazardous. In these cases, air ducts and other devices in contact with an aggressive environment are made of materials that are not subject to intense corrosion by the moving medium (corrosion-resistant alloy steels, aluminum, titanium. metal, vinyl, polyethylene, etc.), or apply special coatings of steel ducts with acid- and alkali-resistant dyes, enamels and varnishes. In such systems, fans and other equipment are installed in an intrinsically safe protected design.

Questions for chapter 2

1. Name the main parameters of the air environment.

2. What is the main purpose of the ventilation system?

3. In which cases the use of natural ventilation systems is justified.

4. What is the advantage of mechanical ventilation systems?

5. What is the name of the process of heat recovery of the removed air, what are its technical and economic advantages?

6. What material is used to produce ventilation ducts most often?

7. What, in your opinion, is affected by the thickness of the metal in the production of air ducts?

8. In which cases air showering is used?

9. Name the main processes of air treatment in the supply ventilation system.

10. In which cases a special design of air ducts and ventilation equipment is used?

Chapter III. Equipment of air ventilation systems

As indicated above, the required state of the air environment in the premises is maintained by general exchange ventilation methods by pumping clean ventilation air into the premises with the necessary temperature-humidity parameters and removal of air that does not meet regulatory requirements. In accordance with this, general exchange ventilation systems should include equipment and devices for intake of outdoor air, its processing, transportation and distribution around the premises, as well as for the removal of exhaust air.

3.1. Air intake and air discharge devices

These include air intake and air discharge devices in mechanical ventilation systems, which are made in the form of holes in the fences of buildings, attached or freestanding shafts. When air is taken from above, the air intake devices are placed in the attic or upper floor of the building, and the channels are removed above the roof in the form of shafts.