Why Pressure Matters More Than Volume in Fan Selection

Why Volume Alone is Misleading in Fan Selection

Many buyers say:

“I need a fan for 20 m³/sec.”

This is incomplete — and often dangerous.

Because air volume alone tells you nothing about how hard the fan must work.

A fan is not selected by airflow only.

It must deliver:

required volume
required pressure
gas conditions
operating environment
Two fans can both deliver 20 m³/sec, but one may need 20 kW while another may need 300 kW.

Why?

Because volume is only half the story.

Simple Analogy: Water Pumping

Suppose someone says:

“I need 1000 liters per minute.”

Your first question should be:

“At what height?”

Because:

  • 1000 LPM to ground level → easy
  • 1000 LPM to 10th floor → much harder

Same flow.
Completely different pump.

Fans are exactly the same.

  • Volume = flow requirement
  • Pressure = lifting effort

Without pressure, volume is meaningless.

Example 1 — Same Volume, Different Pressure

Two customers ask for:

  • 20 m³/sec
Case A – Fresh Air Ventilation

System includes:

  • short duct
  • one bend
  • no filter

Pressure needed:

  • 50 mmWG

Power required:

  • Approx 12–20 kW
Case B – Bag Filter System

Same volume:

  • 20 m³/sec

But the system includes:

  • long duct
  • 6 bends
  • bag filter
  • cyclone
  • chimney

Pressure required:

  • 500 mmWG

Power required:

  • 150–250 kW

Same volume.

10x power difference.

If you select a fan by volume alone, disaster.

Why Does This Happen?

Fan power depends on:

Power∝Q×Pressure\text{Power} \propto Q \times \text{Pressure}

Where:

  • Q = airflow
  • Pressure = resistance

Volume alone ignores resistance.

Example 2 — Sugar Mill ID Fan

Customer says:

“Need 80 m³/sec”

Looks straightforward.

But actual pressure losses are:

  • Cyclones = 300 mmWG
  • Baghouse = 250 mmWG
  • Kiln duct = 150 mmWG
  • Stack = 100 mmWG

Total:

  • 800 mmWG+

This requires a huge megawatt-class fan.

Volume alone becomes completely misleading.

What Volume Alone Does NOT Tell You

Volume alone ignores:

  • system resistance
  • duct length
  • number of bends
  • filters
  • scrubbers
  • cyclones
  • stack height
  • furnace pressure
  • dampers
  • gas density
  • temperature
  • dust loading
  • altitude
  • corrosion
  • abrasion

All of these are critical for proper fan selection.

Temperature Changes Everything

20 m³/sec air at 30°C is NOT equal to 20 m³/sec gas at 250°C.

Hot gas is lighter.

Density changes.

Fan performance changes.

Power changes.

Material requirements change.

Speed changes.

Example

Ambient air:

  • density ≈ 1.2 kg/m³

Hot flue gas:

  • density ≈ 0.7 kg/m³

Same volume.

Completely different fan behavior.

Gas Composition Also Matters

20 m³/sec clean air:

  • easy

20 m³/sec acidic corrosive gas:

  • special metallurgy required

20 m³/sec abrasive rice husk ash:

  • wear-resistant fan required

Same volume.

Different machine.

Static Pressure Matters More Than Most People Think

A fan delivering:

  • 20 m³/sec @ 50 mmWG

is NOT remotely similar to:

  • 20 m³/sec @ 500 mmWG

Power ratio:

  • 10x

Because pressure requirement dominates fan power consumption.

Fan Curve Reality

A fan does not “guarantee volume.”

Actual airflow depends on system resistance.

Customer asks for:

  • 20 m³/sec

But if pressure becomes too high, the same fan may only deliver:

  • 12 m³/sec

Because the operating point shifts.

So airflow is not fixed by demand alone.

Practical Mistake in Fan Replacement

Buyer says:

“Existing fan is 20 m³/sec.”

New supplier matches only the volume.

Pressure is ignored.

Result:

Replacement fan fails.

Because the previous fan may have been:

  • 20 m³/sec @ 450 mmWG

While the new fan is:

  • 20 m³/sec @ 150 mmWG

Looks similar on paper.

Fails in actual plant operation.

Better Fan Selection Questions

Instead of asking only volume, ask:

  • Required flow (m³/sec)?
  • Static/total pressure (mmWG)?
  • Gas temperature?
  • Gas composition?
  • Dust loading?
  • Continuous or intermittent duty?
  • Material requirement?
  • Altitude?
  • Control method?

Real Industrial Analogy

Saying:

“I need a 20 m³/sec fan”

is like saying:

“I need a truck.”

Without explaining:

  • carrying sand or cotton?
  • 5 km or 500 km?
  • flat road or mountains?

Meaningless.

Final Industrial Truth

Volume tells how much air.

Pressure tells how hard the job is.

Without both, fan selection becomes guesswork.

FAQs

1. Why is airflow alone not enough for fan selection?

Airflow only tells the quantity of air required. It does not tell how much resistance the fan must overcome. Pressure, temperature, gas density, and system conditions are equally important.

2. What happens if a fan is selected only by volume?

The fan may become undersized or oversized, leading to smoke leakage, poor airflow, excessive power consumption, low efficiency, and operational failure.

3. Why does pressure affect fan power so much?

Fan power increases with both airflow and pressure.

Power∝Q×Pressure\text{Power} \propto Q \times \text{Pressure}

Higher pressure means the fan must work much harder.

4. How does temperature affect fan selection?

Hot gases have lower density than ambient air. This changes fan performance, required RPM, power consumption, and material selection.

5. What details are required for proper industrial fan selection?

Proper fan selection requires:

  • airflow
  • static or total pressure
  • gas temperature
  • gas composition
  • dust loading
  • material requirement
  • operating conditions
  • altitude
  • control method
 
 

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