4.5 Article

Pollutant capture efficiencies in and around the opening surface of a fume hood under realistic conditions

Journal

INDOOR AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 1636-1653

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1420326X211066538

Keywords

Fume hood; computer simulated person; computational fluid dynamics; ventilation efficiency; pollutant capture efficiency

Funding

  1. Japan Science and Technology (JST), CREST Japan [JP 20356547]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [JP 20KK0099, JP 18H03807]

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This study analyzed the pollutant capture efficiency of a fume hood using computational fluid dynamics and quantitatively evaluated the impact of ventilation efficiency indices. The results showed that the presence of workers did not significantly affect the pollutant capture efficiency, while changing the exhaust airflow rate did impact the distribution of pollutants in the chamber.
Fume hoods are an indispensable instrument for experimental operations dealing with hazardous chemicals, wherein safety operations are strictly adherent to regulations. Within this context, few cases exist wherein the ventilation efficiency and pollutant capture efficiency inside fume hoods are precisely analyzed and quantitatively visualized. In this study, the pollutant capture efficiencies of a fume hood were analyzed by computational fluid dynamics as functions of exhaust airflow rate and according to the posture of workers in front of the fume hood. The indices for ventilation efficiencies, that is, age of air (SVE3), net escape velocity (NEV), and local purging flow rate (L-PFR), were adopted to quantitatively evaluate the pollutant concentration distributions formed inside the fume hood. NEV analysis revealed that the presence of a worker at the front of the fume hood did not significantly affect the pollutant capture efficiency at the opening surface of the fume hood. Changing the exhaust airflow rate resulted in changes in the size of the circulation flow formed in the upper part of the chamber. The circulation flow was found to have a dominant effect on the distribution of SVE3 and on the formation of the pollutant concentration distribution in the chamber.

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