Static Pressure vs Total Pressure in Fans: Complete Guide with Examples

Static Pressure vs Total Pressure (with Practical Examples in mmWG and m³/sec)

Understanding Static Pressure (SP) and Total Pressure (TP) is fundamental in fan engineering, system design, and troubleshooting. These terms are often misunderstood, yet they directly determine fan selection, power consumption, airflow performance, and system resistance.

1. Static Pressure (SP)

Static Pressure is the pressure required to overcome resistance in the system.

It is the pressure that pushes air or gas against:

  • ducts
  • bends
  • dampers
  • bag filters
  • cyclones
  • scrubbers
  • furnace resistance
  • stacks

It does not include velocity energy.

Think of static pressure as:

“The force needed to push air through obstacles.”

Unit:
mmWG (millimeter water gauge)

Practical Example 1 – Bag Filter System

Suppose a dust extraction system has:

  • duct resistance = 80 mmWG
  • bag filter pressure drop = 120 mmWG
  • bends/dampers = 40 mmWG
  • chimney loss = 30 mmWG

Total static pressure:

SP = 80 + 120 + 40 + 30

SP = 270 mmWG

Meaning:

The fan must generate at least 270 mmWG static pressure to move air through the system.

Water analogy

Imagine water flowing through a pipe with many restrictions.

Static pressure = pressure needed to overcome restrictions.

Same in air systems.

2. Velocity Pressure (VP)

Moving air has kinetic energy.

That kinetic energy creates velocity pressure.

Formula:

VP = V² / 16.34

(where V in m/s approximately for mmWG context)

This pressure exists only because air is moving.

If airflow stops:

Velocity pressure becomes zero.

Example:

Air velocity = 20 m/s

VP = 20² / 16.34

= 400 / 16.34

= 24.5 mmWG

3. Total Pressure (TP)

Total pressure is:

Static Pressure + Velocity Pressure

Formula:

TP = SP + VP

This is the complete energy the fan imparts to the air.

Example:

Static pressure = 270 mmWG

Velocity pressure = 24.5 mmWG

Total pressure:

TP = 270 + 24.5

= 294.5 mmWG

Meaning:

The fan actually develops 294.5 mmWG total energy, but only 270 mmWG is available to overcome system resistance.

Simple Understanding

Static pressure:
Pressure against resistance.

Velocity pressure:
Pressure due to motion.

Total pressure:
Complete fan energy.

4. Fan Practical Example (m³/sec)

Suppose a bagasse boiler ID fan handles:

Flow:
25 m³/sec

Duct diameter:
1.2 m

Area:

A = πD²/4

= 3.1416 × 1.2² / 4

= 1.13 m²

Velocity:

Q = A × V

V = Q / A

= 25 / 1.13

= 22.1 m/s

Velocity pressure:

VP = V² / 16.34

= 22.1² / 16.34

= 488 / 16.34

= 29.9 mmWG

If measured static pressure = 350 mmWG

Then:

TP = 350 + 29.9

= 379.9 mmWG

So fan selection:

25 m³/sec @ 380 mmWG TP

5. Practical Example – FD Fan

FD fan supplies combustion air.

Flow:
12 m³/sec

Duct size:
0.9 m dia

Area:

= 0.636 m²

Velocity:

12 / 0.636

= 18.9 m/s

Velocity pressure:

18.9² / 16.34

= 21.8 mmWG

If system static loss:

200 mmWG

Total pressure:

TP = 200 + 21.8

= 221.8 mmWG

Fan duty:

12 m³/sec @ 222 mmWG TP

6. Practical Example – Cement ID Fan

Cement kiln exhaust:

Flow:
80 m³/sec

Duct:
2.0 m dia

Area:

3.14 m²

Velocity:

80 / 3.14

= 25.5 m/s

Velocity pressure:

25.5² / 16.34

= 39.8 mmWG

Static resistance:

  • cyclone = 250
  • baghouse = 180
  • ducts = 100
  • stack = 70

Total static:

600 mmWG

Total pressure:

600 + 39.8

= 639.8 mmWG

Fan duty:

80 m³/sec @ 640 mmWG TP

7. Why Confusion Happens

Customers often say:

“I need fan for 300 mmWG.”

Question:

Static or Total?

Huge difference.

If 300 static:
actual total may be 340+

Wrong selection causes failure.

8. Which Pressure is Used for Fan Selection?

Usually:

Industrial fan OEM selects on Total Pressure

Because fan produces total energy.

System engineer calculates static losses.

Then velocity pressure added.

Example:

System SP = 400 mmWG

Velocity pressure = 35 mmWG

Selection basis:

435 mmWG TP

9. Field Measurement

Using pitot tube:

Measures:

  • static pressure
  • velocity pressure
  • total pressure

Relationship:

TP = SP + VP

10. Real-Life Analogy

Truck moving uphill.

Static pressure:
Energy to climb hill.

Velocity pressure:
Energy due to truck speed.

Total pressure:
Total engine output.

11. Shortcut Formula

If Q known:

Velocity:

V = Q / Area

Then:

VP = V² / 16.34

Then:

TP = SP + VP

Example Quick Calculation

Flow:
40 m³/sec

Duct:
1.5 m dia

Area:

1.767 m²

Velocity:

40 / 1.767

= 22.6 m/s

VP:

31.3 mmWG

SP:
500 mmWG

TP:

531.3 mmWG

Final Comparison

Parameter

Static Pressure

Total Pressure

Meaning

Resistance pressure

Total fan energy

Includes velocity?

No

Yes

Formula

SP

SP + VP

Depends on duct losses?

Yes

Yes

Depends on airflow velocity?

No

Yes

Used in system calculation?

Yes

Yes

Used in fan selection?

Mostly total pressure

 

Final One-Line Understanding

Static Pressure = Force to overcome resistance
Velocity Pressure = Energy of moving air
Total Pressure = Static + Velocity = Actual fan duty

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