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COIL Selection Formulas PDF

This document provides formulas and guidelines for selecting coils and calculating their performance based on factors like air velocity, capacity, temperature differences, and fluid flow. It explains that coil capacity increases with higher air/fluid velocity but so does resistance, so proper selection balances these. For dehumidifying coils, air velocity should not exceed 550 fpm for coils up to 10 fins per inch or 500 fpm for thicker coils. Guidelines are given for calculating sensible and total BTUH capacity from air flow rate and temperature differences, and for determining leaving air temperature. Tables provide fluid factors for calculating fluid capacity and velocity using temperature difference and flow rate. Recommended water velocity is between 1 to 8 feet per second.

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Walter
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
756 views

COIL Selection Formulas PDF

This document provides formulas and guidelines for selecting coils and calculating their performance based on factors like air velocity, capacity, temperature differences, and fluid flow. It explains that coil capacity increases with higher air/fluid velocity but so does resistance, so proper selection balances these. For dehumidifying coils, air velocity should not exceed 550 fpm for coils up to 10 fins per inch or 500 fpm for thicker coils. Guidelines are given for calculating sensible and total BTUH capacity from air flow rate and temperature differences, and for determining leaving air temperature. Tables provide fluid factors for calculating fluid capacity and velocity using temperature difference and flow rate. Recommended water velocity is between 1 to 8 feet per second.

Uploaded by

Walter
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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IMPORTANT COIL SELECTION PERFORMANCE

FORMULAS
AREA and VELOCITY
Coil Area (square feet) = Finned Height In. Finned Length In. 144
Coil Air Velocity = CFM of Air Coil Square feet = Feet Per Minute Velocity
(FPM)
Selection Note: As you raise the air velocity, a coil will increase in capacity but
will have a higher air resistance. Proper selection is the balance of both criteria.
*Please note that when a coil is dehumidifying (moisture forms on the fin pack)
do not select coils above 550 feet per minute velocity up to 10 fins per inch and
not above 500 feet per minute velocity above 10 fins per inch.

BTUH Capacity and LEAVING AIR TEMPERATURES


SENSIBLE BTUH** = CFM 1.08 Air Temperature Difference** = BTUH/HR
**Heating or Sensible Cooling (without latent load)
Air Temperature Difference between dry bulb entering and leaving air
temperatures.
TOTAL BTUH*** = CFM 4.5 ENTH. Of Entering Air - ENTH of Leaving Air
***Total BTUH is Sensible and Latent load together. See enthalpy charts
for enthalpy at different Fahrenheit temperatures.
CALCULATION OF LEAVING AIR IS A 2 STEP PROCESS:
Sensible BTUH CFM 1.08 = Air Temperature Difference
Entering Air Temperature - Air Temperature Difference = Leaving Air
Temperature
Total BTUH CFM 4.5 = Enthalpy Difference
Entering Enthalpy - Enthalpy Difference = Leaving Enthalpy
See Chart for Temp. Versus Enthalpy figure.

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WATER, GLYCOL and FLOW


Fluid BTUH Capacity = GPM Factor Fluid Temperature Difference
GPM = BTUH Fluid Temperature Difference Factor
Fluid Temperature Difference = BTUH GPM Factor

Fluid

Percentage

Factor

Water

100%

511

Ethylene Glycol

20%

478

Ethylene Glycol

30%

465

Ethylene Glycol

40%

444

Ethylene Glycol

50%

417

Propylene Glycol

20%

492

Propylene Glycol

30%

483

Propylene Glycol

40%

457

Propylene Glycol

50%

438

WATER VELOCITY FEET PER SECOND (FPS)


WATER VELOCITY FPS* = GPM Factor Number of Tubes Fed
Tube Diameter

Factor

5/8 OD

1.085

1/2 OD

1.704

3/8 OD

3.050

**As Water Velocity increases, the capacity of a coil increases, but so does the
water resistance. It is a balance between the desired capacity and the resultant

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resistance based on coil selection. To obtain reasonable velocity that equates to


quality heat transfer and moderate resistance, circuitry and resultant water
velocity should be selected between 1 and 8 feet per second with the 2 to 6 feet
per second area being preferred. Under 1 foot per second can cause laminar
flow and over 8 feet per second can cause erosion of tubes based on fast
velocity through tubes and around bends.

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