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Ventilation Rates — Required Air Changes

Recommended ventilation rates and air changes per hour for various building spaces and applications.

ventilationrates

Overview

Ventilation is the process of supplying fresh outdoor air to an enclosed space and removing stale indoor air. Adequate ventilation is essential for:

  • Indoor air quality (IAQ)
  • Occupant health and comfort
  • Moisture and odor control
  • Dilution of indoor pollutants

Air Changes Per Hour (ACH)

The number of times the entire air volume in a room is replaced per hour:

ACH=QVACH = \frac{Q}{V}

where:

  • QQ = ventilation air flow rate (m³/h)
  • VV = room volume (m³)
18 rows
Recommended air changes per hour for various spaces
space
Residential — living rooms
Residential — bedrooms
Residential — kitchens
Residential — bathrooms
Office — general
Office — conference room
Classroom
Hospital — patient room
Hospital — operating room
Restaurant — dining
Kitchen (commercial)
Gymnasium
Swimming pool area
Warehouse
Parking garage
Laboratory
Industrial — welding shop
Industrial — paint booth

Source: engineeringtoolbox.com

ASHRAE 62.1 Ventilation Rates

ASHRAE Standard 62.1 specifies minimum ventilation rates based on per person and per floor area:

Vbz=RpPz+RaAzV_{\text{bz}} = R_p \cdot P_z + R_a \cdot A_z

where:

  • RpR_p = outdoor air per person (L/s per person)
  • PzP_z = zone population
  • RaR_a = outdoor air per floor area (L/s per m²)
  • AzA_z = zone floor area (m²)
Occupancy CategoryRpR_p (L/s per person)RaR_a (L/s per m²)
Office space2.50.3
Conference/meeting2.50.3
Classroom (5+)5.00.6
Retail sales3.80.6

Key Points

  • Ventilation rates are typically higher for spaces with more occupants or more pollutant sources
  • Hospitals and laboratories require the highest ventilation rates for contamination control
  • Energy-efficient ventilation uses heat recovery (HRV/ERV) to reclaim energy from exhaust air
  • CO₂ monitoring can be used for demand-controlled ventilation (DCV)