enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Positive pressure enclosure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_pressure_enclosure

    The airflow inside the habitat should be arranged in a one-way flow with the inlet (at floor level) and outlet (at top level) on the farthest and opposite side. The habitat ventilation flow rate must be 2,000 cubic feet per minute from a clean source per welder to dilute the polluted air inside the habitat. [citation needed]

  3. Underground mine ventilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underground_mine_ventilation

    An auxiliary ventilation system takes air from the flow-through system and distributes it to the mine workings via temporarily mounted ventilation fans, Venturi tubes and disposable fabric or steel ducting. Auxiliary fan and duct systems may be either forcing systems, where fresh air is pushed into mine headings, or exhausting systems that draw ...

  4. Process duct work - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_Duct_Work

    Process duct work conveys large volumes of hot, dusty air from processing equipment to mills, baghouses to other process equipment. Process duct work may be round or rectangular. Although round duct work costs more to fabricate than rectangular duct work, it requires fewer stiffeners and is favored in many applications over rectangular ductwork.

  5. Heat recovery ventilation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_recovery_ventilation

    Diagramatic operation of a thermal wheel Ljungström Air Preheater by Swedish engineer Fredrik Ljungström (1875–1964). A thermal wheel, also known as a rotary heat exchanger, or rotary air-to-air enthalpy wheel, energy recovery wheel, or heat recovery wheel, is a type of energy recovery heat exchanger positioned within the supply and exhaust air streams of air-handling units or rooftop ...

  6. Ground-coupled heat exchanger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground-coupled_heat_exchanger

    A ground-coupled heat exchanger is an underground heat exchanger that can capture heat from and/or dissipate heat to the ground. They use the Earth's near constant subterranean temperature to warm or cool air or other fluids for residential, agricultural or industrial uses.

  7. Pressurisation ductwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressurisation_ductwork

    There are two means of providing fire-resistance rated ductwork: Inherently fire-resistant, or proprietary factory assembled ducts which are made of sheet metal shells filled with mixtures of rockwool, fiber and silicon dioxide

  8. Recovery boiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_boiler

    The air levels in recovery boilers soon standardized to two: a primary air level at the char bed level and a secondary above the liquor guns. In the first tens of years, the furnace lining was of refractory brick. The flow of smelt on the walls causes extensive replacement and soon designs that eliminated the use of bricks were developed.

  9. Heat and smoke vent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_and_smoke_vent

    The majority of guidance available for design of heat and smoke building vents installed in buildings is restricted to nonsprinklered, single-story buildings. [4] This is partly a historical consequence of the installation of heat and smoke vents following the August 1953 General Motors, Livonia, MI major fire in a nonsprinklered manufacturing facility which effectively stopped the production ...