Performance and usage of mechanical residential kitchen ventilation
Publication Type | Conference Paper
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Abstract |
Burners and cooking activities are both major sources of air pollutants in many residences. Mechanical kitchen ventilation can effectively reduce cooking-related indoor air pollution but the knowledge about kitchen ventilation device performance and usage in real homes remains limited. We reviewed recent lab, field and survey studies that investigated the performance and occupant use patterns for mechanical kitchen ventilation devices. We have found the following three major issues. Firstly, in-home performance is lower than what was certificated in laboratory testing. In several recent field studies, researchers investigated 125 US single family homes and 23 apartments and found 82 homes had range hoods or over-the-range microwaves (OTR) certificated by Home Ventilating Institute (HVI) that had working airflows greater than 100 cfm. However, the field measurements showed only 44 of them had installed airflow that matched the rated, with the average ratio of installed versus rated flow of 0.76. The lower installed airflows were due to high air flow resistance of duct venting systems, incorrect installation and dirty hood inlets. Second, the knowledge of range hood performance for pollutant removal before mixing into the room (i.e. capture efficiency) is very limited. We found the capture efficiency was only measured for 57 hoods in 9 studies in the US, either in the |
Conference Name |
ASHRAE Winter 2024
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Year of Publication |
2024
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