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In-Situ Performance of HVAC Filters Aged with 100% Outdoor Air

<div>In this study, three ducts have been built in Herrick Labs, Purdue University, West Lafayette, representing the real HVAC systems. Different types of filters have been tested in each duct, including MERV8, MERV14 mechanical filters, and MERV13 electret filter. One of this study's main objectives is to compare in-situ filter performance with the MERV rating, which comes from laboratory testing. Eventually, we can explain the variations and have a better understanding of the in-situ filter performance. Another primary objective is to evaluate the aging process of tested filters. Typically, HVAC filters will not be replaced or maintained frequently, so they tend to stay in HVAC systems for an extended period. In this study, the evolution of filter aging performance is tested continuously for the experiment's entire duration, including temporal evolution of pressure drops, filtration efficiencies, and loaded particulate mass on the filter media.</div><div><br></div><div>This study will continue for 52 full weeks. This thesis is a part of the on-going study, including the data up to the first 18 weeks so far. As a result, the pressure drops are steadily increasing over time for most filters due to the natural filter loading process, except for the MERV13 electret filter, which shows no significant change at all. In terms of the filtration efficiencies, two efficiency categories are included: mass-based efficiencies (ePM x ) for sizeintegrated particulate mass (PM) and size-resolved efficiencies. It can be seen that there is no significant change in ePM x for MERV8 and MERV14 filters, MERV13 electret filter whereas shows a degradation in ePM x efficiencies. Size-resolve efficiencies provide additional filtration efficiencies as a function of particle sizes, therefore more comprehensive. It can be found that for MERV8 and MERV14 filters, the efficiencies are slowly increasing for particles above 300 nm, with some variations. MERV13 electret filter has an explicitly decreasing trend for efficiencies across all particle size ranges.</div><div><br></div><div>Besides the filter loading process, another component affecting the filter performance is the environmental factor, such as temperature, relative humidity (RH), and precipitation events, including rainfall and snowfall. As a result, it can be observed that when precipitation events, the pressure drops trend to decrease for that period. It is also evident that decreasing temperature tends to promote pressure drops.</div>

  1. 10.25394/pgs.14515173.v1
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:purdue.edu/oai:figshare.com:article/14515173
Date05 May 2021
CreatorsChunxu Huang (10723662)
Source SetsPurdue University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis
RightsCC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Relationhttps://figshare.com/articles/thesis/In-Situ_Performance_of_HVAC_Filters_Aged_with_100_Outdoor_Air/14515173

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