Dictionary Definition
ventilate
Verb
1 expose to cool or cold air so as to cool or
freshen; "air the old winter clothes"; "air out the smoke-filled
rooms" [syn: vent, air out, air]
2 expose to the circulation of fresh air so as to
retard spoilage; "Wheat should be well ventilated"
3 circulate through and freshen; "The gust of air
ventilated the room"
4 give expression or utterance to; "She vented
her anger"; "The graduates gave vent to cheers" [syn: vent, give
vent]
5 furnish with an opening to allow air to
circulate or gas to escape; "The architect did not thnk about
ventilating the storage space"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
- To replace stale or noxious air with fresh.
- To circulate air through a building, etc.
- To provide with a vent.
- To expose something to the circulation of fresh air.
- To expose something to public examination or discussion.
- To provide manual or mechanical breathing to a patient.
Translations
To circulate air through a building, etc.
- German: belüften, ventilieren
To provide with a vent
To expose something to public examination or
discussion
(medicine) To provide manual or mechanical
breathing to a patient
- German: beatmen
Italian
Adjective
ventilate- Feminine plural form of ventilato
Verb
ventilate- Form of Second-person plural present tense, ventilare
- Form of Second-person plural imperative, ventilare#Italian|ventilare
Extensive Definition
Ventilation is the intentional movement of
air from outside a building
to the inside. It is the V in HVAC. With clothes
dryers, and combustion equipment such as water
heaters, boilers,
fireplaces, and woodstoves, their exhausts are often called vents
or flues — this should not be confused with ventilation.
The vents or flues carry the products of combustion which have to
be expelled from the building in a way which does not cause harm to
the occupants of the building. Movement of air between indoor
spaces, and not the outside, is called transfer air.
Ventilation air, as defined in ASHRAE Standard 62.1
and the ASHRAE
Handbook, is that air used for providing acceptable indoor
air quality. When people or animals are present in buildings,
ventilation air is necessary to dilute odours and limit the
concentration of carbon
dioxide and airborne pollutants such as respirable suspended
particles (RSPs) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Ventilation
air is often delivered to spaces by mechanical systems which may
also heat, cool, humidify and dehumidify the space. Air movement
into buildings can occur due to uncontrolled infiltration of
outside air through the building fabric (see stack
effect) or the use of deliberate natural ventilation
strategies. Advanced air filtration and treatment processes such as
scrubbing, can provide ventilation air by cleaning and
recirculating a proportion of the air inside a building.
In certain applications, such as submarines,
pressurized aircraft, and spacecraft, ventilation air is also
needed to provide oxygen,
and to dilute carbon dioxide for survival. Buildings normally have
sufficient air leakage to prevent dangerous levels of carbon
dioxide. Inadequate ventilation in a densely occupied room can
cause the level of carbon dioxide to increase leading to sleepiness
and reduced efficiency at work. This is a matter of concern in
schools where attentiveness and learning ability may be adversely
affected.
In commercial, industrial, and institutional
(CII) buildings, and modern jet aircraft, return air is often
recirculated to the air handler. A portion of the supply air is
normally exfiltrated through the building envelope or exhausted
from the building (e.g., toilet or kitchen exhaust) and is replaced
by outside air introduced inot the return air stream. The rate of
ventilation air required, most often provided by this
mechanically-induced outside air, is often determined from ASHRAE
Standard 62.1 for CII buildings, or 62.2 for low-rise residential
buildings, or similar standards.
The ventilation rate, for CII buildings, is
normally expressed by the volumetric flowrate of outside air being
introduced to the building. The typical units used are cubic feet
per minute (commonly abbreviated as CFM), or, in metric units,
liters per second (L/s). The ventilation rate can also be expressed
on a per person or per unit floor area basis, such as CFM/p or
CFM/ft², or as air changes per hour.
For residential buildings, which mostly rely on
infiltration
for meeting their ventilation needs, the common ventilation rate
measure is the number of times the whole interior volume of air is
replaced per hour, and is called air changes per hour (I or ACH;
units of 1/h). ACHs of 0.5 to 1.5 are common in modern U.S. homes
under winter design weather conditions.
If smoking is allowed indoors, ventilation air is
needed in sufficient quantities to dilute the airborne
contaminants. Banning indoor tobacco
smoking and the use of candles, air
fresheners, incense, and other generators of air contaminants
is much more effective for improving indoor
air quality.
Combustion
(e.g., fireplace,
gas
heater, candle,
oil
lamp, etc.) consumes oxygen and produces replaced by carbon
dioxide other unhealthy gases and smoke), requiring ventilation air.
An open chimney promotes
infiltration (i.e. natural ventilation) because of the negative
pressure change induced by the buoyant, warmer air leaving
through the chimney. The warm air is typically replaced by heavier,
cold air.
Ventilation in a structure is also needed for
removing water vapor,
produced by respiration,
burning, and cooking,
and for removing odors, e.g., from a toilet or kitchen. If water vapor is
permitted to accumulate, it may damage the structure, insulation,
or finishes. When operating, an air
conditioner usually removes excess moisture from the air. A
dehumidifier may
also be appropriate for removing airborne moisture.
Types of ventilation
- Mechanical or forced ventilation: through an air handling unit or direct injection to a space by a fan. A local exhaust fan can enhance infiltration or natural ventilation, thus increasing the ventilation air flow rate.
- Natural ventilation occurs when the air in a space is changed with outdoor air without the use mechanical systems, such as a fan. Most often natural ventilation is assured through operable windows but it can also be achieved through temperature and pressure differences between spaces. Open windows or vents are not a good choice for ventilating a basement or other below ground structure. Allowing outside air into a cooler below ground space will cause problems with humidity and condensation.
- Infiltration is separate from ventilation, but is often used to provide ventilation air
Ventilation equipment
Natural ventilation
Natural
ventilation is the process of supplying and removing air
through an indoor space by natural means. There are two types of
natural ventilation occurring in buildings: wind
driven ventilation and stack
ventilation. The pressures generated by buoyancy, also known as
'the stack
effect', are quite low while wind pressures are usually far
greater.
Demand Controlled Ventilation (DCV)
DCV makes it possible to maintain proper
ventilation and improve air quality while saving energy. ASHRAE has
determined that: "It is consistent with the Ventilation rate
procedure that Demand Control be permitted for use to reduce the
total outdoor air supply during periods of less occupancy." That
means the unit - using CO2 sensors and a CO2 setpoint selected for
the required ventilation rate - will control the amount of
ventilation for the actual number of occupants. During design
occupancy, a unit with the DCV system will deliver the same amount
of outdoor air as a unit using the ventilation-rate procedure.
However, DCV can generate substantial energy savings whenever the
space is occupied below the design level.
See also
References
External links
ventilate in Danish: Ventilation
ventilate in German: Ventilation
ventilate in French: Ventilation
ventilate in Dutch: Ventilatie
ventilate in Japanese: 換気
ventilate in Polish: Wentylacja
ventilate in Russian: Вентиляция
ventilate in Ukrainian: Вентиляція
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aerate,
air, air out, air-condition,
air-cool, airify,
analyze, break it to,
break the news, breathe,
bring up, broach,
canvass, chew the fat,
chill, come out with,
comment upon, confide,
confide to, consider,
controvert, cool, cross-ventilate, deal with,
debate, deliberate, deliberate upon,
discourse, discourse
about, discuss, display, divulgate, divulge, evulgate, examine, exchange views,
fan, freshen, freshen the air,
fumigate, give, give out, give vent to, go
into, handle, ice, ice-cool, infrigidate, introduce, investigate, knock around,
let get around, let in on, let out, make known, make public,
moot, open up, out with,
oxygenate, oxygenize, pass under review,
publish, put, put out, rap, reason, reason about, reason the
point, refresh, refrigerate, reveal, review, sift, state, study, take up, talk, talk about, talk of, talk
over, tell, thresh out,
treat, utter, vent, wind, winnow