Double the Performance of DehumidifiersDouble the Performance of DehumidifiersBy Kevin Fisher The focus lately in water restoration has been on increasing evaporation in materials to speed drying. Increasing evaporation is obviously a key to drying structures faster. But now that we can increase the speed of evaporation, remember that all that water has to go somewhere. The job of dehumidifiers and open-air drying is to remove the water that is evaporated. But how much water is being removed? Is it enough? And most importantly for your bottom line, how can you get more performance out of your current equipment? What Is Grain Depression? Be sure to determine the GPP onsite. Many companies document temperature and relative humidity, but don't calculate GPP until returning to the shop. What if you find out that the dehumidifier isn't working? It isn't cost effective to make a second trip to the job that day, so the underperforming dehumidifier will wait until tomorrow. Not a good idea! A better alternative is to properly train employees to monitor and document temperature, RH, and GPP. Also, train employees to make the next step and look for grain depression in every dehumidifier placed on a water loss. Whenever using grain depression, keep in mind that it is a very basic measurement. In many ways it is a relative reading that can be misinterpreted. Grain depression must be evaluated hand in hand with the amount of air (CFM) that a dehumidifier moves in order to get a full picture of the true effect of dehumidifier performance. For example, these readings were from a test performed yesterday (Chart 1).
Based on grain depression alone, the decision might be made to remove the Dehumidifier A because it is "performing less." This would be the wrong choice. Estimating Pint Removal: For the Math Wiz In the previous example, Dehumidifier A has 26 GPP of grain depression. This means that for every 14 cubic feet of air that is moving through the dehumidifier, 26/7000ths of a pound of water is dropping into the collection pan. Every minute, 320 cubic feet of air move, which computes to 594 grains of water removed per minute. There are 1,440 minutes in a day, therefore 855,772 grains of water will be removed in a day (if 26 grain depression keeps up). Converting grains to pounds, 122 pounds of water will be removed. Since there are 8.34 pounds in a gallon, there would be 14.7 gallons removed. Eight pints per gallon calculates out to just over 117 pints of water removed. Estimating Pint Removal: For the Rest of Us
Determining Actual Pint Removal
As you can see, depending on when the reading was taken, grain depression could vary widely. The only way to find exact pint removal from a dehumidifier is to collect the water in a bucket, but I don't personally recommend this because I've seen too many buckets fail. Conventional vs. LGR
and Graph 2.
A low-grain refrigerant overcomes this problem by adding additional cooling power to the system. Pre-cooling uses the magic of thermodynamics and to cool the air even more. LGRs pre-cool the air coming in to the dehumidifier; this pre-cooling uses virtually no electricity. Doubling the Performance of Dehumidifiers As the air in a structure dries throughout the job, dehumidifiers have to work harder to remove water. Water removal declines as the job goes on. Water removal can be doubled simply by pre-cooling the air even more before it enters the dehumidifier. You can achieve this by: In tests performed in our facility, intake air temperature can be decreased
However, this setup must only be used when the air is relatively dry (below 60 GPP). Restorers will know that this opportunity exists when air conditioning systems are no longer removing moisture (no longer have a grain depression). If this setup is used when air conditioning systems are still removing water, then the air provided to the refrigerant will not only be cooler, it will be drier – and the drier air will limit dehumidifier performance. Application And last but not least: if you are wondering what the last 1,400-plus words were about, I encourage you to further your education in water restoration. Today's water restoration courses spend more time explaining psychrometry and equipment placement. You'll learn the basics, so you can catch on to more of the advanced psychrometry discussed here. Kevin Fisher is a certified Master Water Restorer and a Technical Educator with Dri-Eaz Products. He teaches Applied Structural Drying and Water Restoration Technician Courses at the company's Nashville location. You can e-mail him at kevinf@dri-eaz.com |
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