Aircraft ventilation design challenges relating to contaminated ventilation air, pathogens and VOCs, fire fighting and smoke control, low humidity and fuselage condensation, offgassing, passenger cabin thermal discomfort.
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Aircraft Ventilation System Design Challenges
1. Copyright Indoor Air Technologies Inc.
Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
1
Douglas S. Walkinshaw, PhD., P.E.
Passenger aircraft ventilation
system design challenges and
solutions
April 2005
2. Copyright Indoor Air Technologies Inc.
Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
2
Passenger Aircraft Ventilation System
Design Challenges
Figure 1. A passenger aircraft ventilation system must cope with
higher occupancy densities, a wider range of occupant ages, health
conditions and activities, more unusual ventilation air contaminants,
lower ventilation air moisture content and more severe fire safety
challenges than any other public space ventilation system.
3. Copyright Indoor Air Technologies Inc.
Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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Current ventilation norms
Building offices 7 persons/10,000 ft3,
Aircraft cabins 230 persons/10,000 ft3
Building offices > 18 L/s/person filtered low outdoor air VOCs
Aircraft cabins > 3.75 L/s/p unfiltered bleed air VOCs, ozone
Building offices 50 L/s/person (100 CFM/p)
Aircraft cabins 7.5-10 L/s/person (15-20 CFM/p)
Building offices Fleecy chairs, carpets with low traffic
Aircraft cabins Fleecy chairs, carpets with high traffic
Building offices 20-65%
Aircraft cabins 5-25%
Building offices copier, human
Aircraft cabins human, combustion, anti-corrosion treatment
Building offices escape in minutes
Aircraft cabins escape often not possible
Building offices air pressure = 0.9 to 1 atm; BLOC = 95-100%
Aircraft cabins air pressure = 0.75 atm, BLOC = 85-90%
Occupant contagion
Indoor/outdoor air exchange rate
Air flow rate (outdoor + recirculation air)
Dust and allergens
Relative humidity
Volatile organic compounds
Fire, biological/chemical agent release
Blood oxygen content (BLOC)
Buildings: - 20F to +110F
Aircraft : - 55F to +110FOutdoor temperature environment
Table 1. Current ventilation norms: aircraft passenger cabins
versus buildings
4. Copyright Indoor Air Technologies Inc.
Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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Six ventilation design challenges
addressed in this presentation
Table 2. Aircraft ventilation design challenges and a set of
solutions
Challenge # Aircraft Ventilation Challenge
1 Unusually contaminated ventilation air.
2
Exposure to occupant-generated pathogens and
VOCs.
3
Limited biological/chemical agent release, fire
fighting and smoke control capability
4
Low occupied space humidity and fuselage
condensation.
5 Fuselage offgasing on the ground.
6
Passenger cabin thermal discomfort due to warm
fuselage on the ground on sunny days, and cold
fuselage during cruising flight.
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ENGINE BLEED AIR CONTAMINATION SOURCES
a. Ingestion of other aircraft engine fume exhaust
b. Bearing oil leaks
c. Deicer ingestion
d. Oil coated ventilation ducts which sorb and later
desorb these contaminants
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #1
Contaminated ventilation (engine bleed) air
Table 3. Aircraft ventilation air contaminants
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Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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Figure 2. Volatile organic compound chromatogram for bleed air
during flight, TVOC = 270 ug/m3. The dominant branched alkanes are typically
associated with fuels and solvents. Their origin could have been the oil coating the
ducts acting as a sorbent of, for example, earlier ingested engine exhaust fumes.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #1
Contaminated ventilation (engine bleed) air
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Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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Bleed air
study by
Fox
Bleed air
study by
Nagda
AM SD
Ethanol 36.0 118.7 0.0 0.0
Acetone 9.7 18.7 3.0 2.7
Acetaldehyde 8.8 15.6 1.0 1.2
Toluene 5.5 8.6 3.8 5.9
Propionaldehyde 4.0 7.4 0.8 1.3
Methylene chloride 1.6 6.7 1.8 2.5
m/p-Xylene 3.4 5.6 0.5 0.5
o-Xylene 1.6 3.9 0.0 0.0
Tetrachloroethylene 1.5 2.2 0.0 0.0
Benzene 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0
Compound name
Aircraft ventilation air
ug/m3 (ref 2,3)
Air outside office
buildings, ug/m3 (ref 1)
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #1
Contaminated ventilation (engine bleed) air
Table 3. Some volatile organic compound concentrations
found in cabin ventilation air versus averages for the same
VOCs in the air found outside office buildings.
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Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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a. Aircraft ventilation and air circulation per person rates are
lower than in any other public indoor environment.
b. High aircraft cabin occupancy density creates peak occupant
generated pathogen and VOC exposures sooner than in any
other public indoor environment.
c. Ceiling supply air diffusers are remote from perimeter seats,
exacerbating the pathogen and VOC exposure loads in near
the cabin liner.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #2
Occupant-generated pathogen & volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
Table 4. Reasons for high occupant generated pathogens
and VOCs in commercial aircraft passenger cabins.
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AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #2
Occupant-generated pathogen & volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
Table 5. Three dominant volatile organic compounds
found in aircraft cabin air versus their concentration
averages in some office buildings.
Cabin air
low GM
Cabin air
high GM
AM SD
Ethanol 324.0 1,116.0 81.1 82.3
Toluene 6.6 68.0 11.0 7.5
Acetone 40.8 58.9 26.3 8.9
Aircraft cabin air,
ug/m3 (ref 2,3)
Office buildings,
ug/m3 (ref 1)
Compound
name
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Canada & USA www.indoorair.ca
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0
0.05
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.25
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
Time after occupancy, hours
Relativebioeffluent(gases,pathogens)
concentrations
V= 5CFM/p SLE,
occupancy=230 p/10,000
ft3
V= 5CFM/p SLE,
occupancy=25 p/10,000
ft3
V= 5 CFM/SLE,
occupancy = 7p/10,000
ft3
Equilibrium concentration
For all ODs
Office OD
School OD
Aircraft cabin OD
Figure 3. The impact of occupancy density on occupant-
generated pathogen and VOC exposures. Aircraft ODs are
higher and movement more limited than in any other common public
space, creating higher occupant-generated VOC and pathogen
exposures in aircraft cabins than in any other public space.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #2
Occupant-generated pathogen & volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
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a. Fire in the cavity behind the liner currently cannot be
extinguished using Halon as phosgene will be produced
which could enter the cabin and kill the occupants.
b. Smoke in the cavity behind the liner can enter into the cabin.
c. Smoke, biological and chemical agents released in the
occupied space currently can only be exhausted at the floor in
most aircraft. This is inefficient as convection currents tend to
move these agents in the opposite direction.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #3
Limited firefighting, smoke, biological and chemical agent control
capability
Table 6. Problems with current emergency air contaminant
removal measures in aircraft passenger cabins.
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The generally accepted minimum relative humidity for comfort is 20% to 65%. The
optimal relative humidity range for health is 40-50%. Typically neither of
these ranges are met in aircraft for two reasons:
a. The low moisture content of the ventilation air creates aircraft occupied
space humidities of 10% or lower, during international flights. Such low
occupied space humidity can cause respiratory and eye discomfort. For
some with respiratory problems, it can result in acute health problems.
b. Aircraft occupied spaces generally are not humidified. This is because
humid cabin air passes through openings in the occupied space liner
onto the cold fuselage behind. Here the moisture condenses creating a
number of problems. These include added dead weight, deterioration of
the insulation, wiring and fuselage, microbial growth and drips through
the liner onto the occupants and furnishings below.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #4
Occupied space humidity and fuselage condensation
Table 7. Fuselage condensation the reason why aircraft
passenger occupied spaces are not humidified
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Stack Pressure = Air density *
(Ti-To) * H/2
Figure 4. STACK PRESSURES create air circulation flows between
the occupied space and the fuselage cavity behind the liner. This air
circulation deposits occupied space air humidity as condensate on the cold
fuselage. Stack pressures are created by the thermal gradient between the
occupied space and the outdoor air, which can exceed 70 Celsius degrees during
cruise.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #4
Occupied space humidity and fuselage condensation
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AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #5
Fuselage offgasing
Figure 5. Volatile organic compound chromatogram for fuselage
(envelope) VOCs at take-off, TVOC = 22,000 ug/m3. VOCs primarily originated
with anti-corrosion treatment oil. These VOC concentrations are highest before
take-off with the fuselage heated in a summer sun. Other fuselage VOC sources
include wet insulation and microbial growth.
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0
100
200
300
400
500
600
ug/m3
World indoor
norm
Canada
indoor norm
Gasper Envelope
Figure 6. Envelope and gasper microbial volatile organic
compounds (MVOCs). Samples taken while on the runway. MVOCs were
higher than indoor air norms in the fuselage envelope behind the occupied space
liner, and lower in the gasper bleed air. The MVOC primary origin in the
envelope likely was the insulation.
AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #5
Fuselage offgasing and microbial growth
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AIRCRAFT VENTILATION DESIGN CHALLENGE #6
Thermal discomfort
a. On the ground, during boarding and prior to take-off, aircraft
occupied spaces can be uncomfortably warm. In part this is
because the aluminum skin and cavity behind the liner heat
rapidly in the sun to temperatures well in excess of 100F. The
forced air circulation cannot keep up with this thermal load.
b. In the air during cruise, the cavity behind the liner cools
under external temperatures in excess of 50 F, reaching its
cold soak condition in about an hour. This can make for cool
occupied spaces, particularly under low occupancies and
during sleeping periods on international flights.
Table 8. Occupied space thermal discomfort is caused in part
by high fuselage external thermal loads.