United States
               Environmental Protection
               Agency
Air and Energy Engineering
Research  Laboratory
Research Triangle Park, NC 27711
               Research and Development
EPA/600/SR-94/180  November 1994
EPA      Project  Summary
               Ventilation  Research:
               A  Review  of Recent
               Indoor Air Quality Literature
               Douglas W. VanOsdell
                The objective of this literature review
              was to survey and summarize recent
              and ongoing  research  into indoor air
              quality (lAQ)-related ventilation topics.
                This Project Summary was developed
              by  EPA's Air and Energy Engineering
              Research Laboratory, Research Triangle
              Park, NC, to announce key findings of
              the research project that is fully docu-
              mented in a separate report of the same
              title (see Project Report ordering infor-
              mation at back).

              Purpose
                This review was  undertaken for two rea-
              sons:

                1. to investigate and evaluate the pos-
                   sibilities, capabilities, and limitations
                   of ventilation and ventilation sys-
                   tems as a means to improve IAQ,
                   and

                2. to recommend for consideration
                   those areas of ventilation research
                   that might prove helpful in solving
                   the IAQ problem in commercial and
                   other buildings.

              General Description
                The review showed that there are three
              general types  of IAQ research activities
              currently under way:

                1. basic  laboratory investigations into
                   the characteristics of sources and
                   processes that influence IAQ,

                2. applied  engineering research into
                   transport, dispersion,  control  de-
                   vices, control strategies,  and costs,
                   and
  3.  surveys and evaluations of the en-
     ergy/economic impact of IAQ and
     communication of research  results
     to users.

  The ventilation  research encompassed
by the scope of this review largely falls in
the second category. This broad category
of IAQ  applied engineering research is
reviewed within the following framework:

  1.  Pollutant Transport—from source to
     building envelope boundary (disper-
     sion/wind transport)  to entry into
     the  envelope (heating, ventilation,
     and air conditioning  (HVAC), infil-
     tration, and doors/windows),

  2.  Air  Cleaner Research—in-duct air
     cleaners, in-room air cleaners, and
     radon control by particle capture,

  3.  Diffuser Research—room  airflow
     and pollutant dispersion, fundamen-
     tal source/sink transport, and jet/
     diffuser flow,

  4.  Single-Room Flow and Dispersion—
     single rooms and macromodels,

  5.  Building HVAC Flow and Disper-
     sion—multizone buildings and
     macromodels,  schools, hospitals,
     and other special buildings,

  6.  HVAC/Building Design, Operation,
     and Control— HVAC system design
     and selection, innovative ventilation
     delivery designs such as ventilated
     workstations, personally controlled
     ventilation  systems,  displacement
     ventilation,  demand-controlled ven-

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      tilation, and energy recovery  sys-
      tems,

  7.  Applied Biocontaminant Research—
      principles of microbiological reduc-
      tion and control,

  8.  Building Performance—evaluation
      and measurement of air exchange
      rate, ventilation effectiveness,  and
      interzonal transfers.

  The review included appropriate litera-
ture citations for the past 5 years.  It  also
captured current information from research
programs  from the  American Society  of
Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Condition-
ing  Engineers (ASHRAE), the Department
of Energy (DOE), and the National Insti-
tute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Review Findings and
Reccommendations
  The review led to the following research
recommendations:

  1.  Pollutant   Transport—there  are
      many important areas of concern in
      the pollutant  transport research
      topic; however.the area of building
      infiltration seems to be understud-
      ied.

  The need arises from the fact that  infil-
tration air can become contaminated by
building  materials or by materials of mi-
crobiological  origin.  Little  research  has
been conducted in this area.
  Another area of concern is the effect of
wind pressure fields on building ventila-
tion in general and outdoor air exchange
rates.
  2.   Air Cleaner Research—the perfor-
      mance of air cleaners should be
      evaluated  with tests that  provide
      HVAC  system   designers  the
      needed  information  to  specify air
      cleaners and  reliably predict their
      performance.

  Standard air cleaner test methods for
both particle and  gas-phase contaminants
need to be developed.

  3.   Diffuser Research—development of
      improved  models of diffuser  flow
      (particularly for cold-air distribution
      systems) and the impact of diffuser
      design on  ventilation effectiveness
      is a very useful research topic.

  4.   Single-Room Flow and Dispersion—
      a primary  knowledge gap that ex-
      ists appears  to  be  experimental
      measurements that can be used to
      evaluate the many available  com-
      putational flow  dynamics (CFD)
      models.

  5.   Building HVAC Flow and Disper-
      sion—the most important need ap-
      pears to be improved measurement
      techniques, including the  develop-
      ment  of standardized methods.
      Development  of such methods
      would encourage their use, ensure
      a supply  of  consistent  data for
      model development, and  increase
      the overall amount of performance
      data available.  These  data could
      be used to validate  and  improve
      CFD computer models.
  6.  HVAC/Building Design, Operation,
      and Control— an important need ap-
      pears to be in gathering and orga-
      nizing what is known about design-
      ing  buildings and choosing HVAC
      systems to ensure good IAQ.

  This information would then be commu-
nicated to the building  industry.  A good
approach would  be to use  a cost and
energy modeling  simulation  program  to
determine the best energy/cost/IAQ de-
sign for HVAC systems used in different
types of buildings located  in  various cli-
mates and with varying  space usage.
  A systematic investigation of the perfor-
mance, costs, and benefits (including en-
ergy impact)  of standard and innovative
ventilation schemes would allow design-
ers to make early use of these technolo-
gies if they prove worthy.

  7.  Applied Biocontamination  Re-
      search—there are two areas of con-
      cern with  this topic: strengthened
      HVAC maintenance practices, need
      to  be  strengthened,  possibly
      through education or maintenance
      standards, and basic research into
      the  conditions and  materials that
      affect microbial  growth in  HVAC
      systems.

  8.  Building Performance—as with the
      air distribution category, the primary
      research needs for building perfor-
      mance evaluation are for improved
      sensors and  measurement tech-
      niques, and a standardized evalua-
      tion protocol.

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   D.W.  VanOsdell is with Research Triangle Institute, P.O. Box 12194, Research
     Triangle Park, NC 27709-2194.
   Russell N. Kulp  is the EPA Project Officer (see below).
   The complete report, entitled "Ventilation Research: A Review of Recent Indoor Air
     Quality Literature," (Order No. PB95-129086/AS;  Cost: $19.50; subject to
     change) will be available only from:
           National Technical Information Service
           5285 Port Royal Road
           Springfield, VA 22161
           Telephone: 703-487-4650
   The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
           Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory
           U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
           Research Triangle Park, NC 27711
United States
Environmental Protection Agency
Center for Environmental Research Information
Cincinnati, OH 45268

Official Business
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         EPA
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EPA/600/SR-94/180

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