System Resistance vs Fan Curve | Operating Point Guide

System Resistance vs Fan Curve (Simple Explanation with Example in m³/sec and mmWG)

This is one of the most important concepts in fan engineering, but once understood visually, it becomes very simple.

Think of it like this:

Fan wants to push air.
System resists airflow.
Actual operating point happens where both agree.

That meeting point is called the operating point

1. What is System Resistance?

Every air/gas system resists airflow.

Resistance comes from:

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

The more air you try to push, the harder the resistance becomes.

Important:

Resistance does NOT increase linearly.

It increases as square of airflow.

Formula:

[SP = KQ^2]

Where:

  • SP = static pressure (mmWG)
  • Q = flow (m³/sec)
  • K = system constant

Meaning:

Double flow → resistance becomes 4 times.

Simple Example

Suppose:

At 10 m³/sec, pressure drop = 100 mmWG

Then:

At 20 m³/sec:

[100 \times (20/10)^2]

= 100 × 4

= 400 mmWG

At 30 m³/sec:

[100 \times (30/10)^2]

= 100 × 9

= 900 mmWG

So system curve rises sharply.

System Curve Table

Flow (m³/sec)

Resistance (mmWG)

10

100

15

225

20

400

25

625

30

900

This forms an upward curved line.

2. What is Fan Curve?

A fan has limited capability.

At low flow:
fan gives high pressure.

At high flow:
pressure falls.

Because energy gets spent moving more air.

So fan curve slopes downward.

Example fan:

Flow (m³/sec)

Fan Pressure (mmWG)

10

800

15

700

20

550

25

380

30

200

Meaning:

Fan can produce:

  • 800 mmWG at low flow
  • only 200 mmWG at high flow

Simple Understanding

Fan says:

“I can give less pressure if you ask for more flow.”

System says:

“I need more pressure if you want more flow.”

Conflict happens.

Actual point = where both match.

Combined Table

Flow

Fan Pressure

System Resistance

10

800

100

15

700

225

20

550

400

22

480

484

25

380

625

At ~22 m³/sec:

Fan ≈ System

That is operating point.

Meaning of Operating Point

Actual fan delivery:

22 m³/sec at 480 mmWG

Not design guess.

Actual physical reality.

Visual Understanding

Imagine graph:

X-axis:
Flow (m³/sec)

Y-axis:
Pressure (mmWG)

Fan curve:

downward slope

System curve:

upward curve

Intersection:

OPERATING POINT

Like scissors crossing.

3. Why System Resistance Increases with Square?

Because air friction rises rapidly.

Higher velocity causes:

  • more turbulence
  • more wall friction
  • more bend losses
  • more filter losses

Example:

Driving car:

40 km/hr easy

120 km/hr much harder due to air drag.

Same principle.

4. Practical Example – Bag Filter ID Fan

The example of Bag filter ID Fan are as follow :

Suppose system:

Bag filter dust extraction.

Required design:

20 m³/sec

Losses:

Duct = 120 mmWG

Bag filter = 200 mmWG

Bends = 60 mmWG

Stack = 40 mmWG

Total:

420 mmWG

At 20 m³/sec

System constant:

[K=\frac{420}{20^2}]

[=\frac{420}{400}= 1.05

So:

[SP=1.05Q^2]

Now fan curve:

Flow

Pressure

15

600

18

520

20

450

22

370

25

250

System values:

At 18:

1.05 × 324 = 340

At 20:

420

At 22:

508

Comparison:

Flow

Fan

System

18

520

340

20

450

420

21

410

463

Operating point ≈ 20.2 m³/sec

Meaning:

Fan works correctly.

5. What if Fan Too Small?

Small fan:

Flow

Pressure

15

350

18

250

20

180

System needs:

420 at 20.

Fan can only give 180.

Impossible.

Actual operating point may become:

14–15 m³/sec

Production suffers.

Meaning:

Undersized fan.

6. What if Fan Too Big?

Oversized fan:

Flow

Pressure

20

800

25

700

30

550

System curve same.

Operating point shifts high.

Maybe:

28 m³/sec

Problems:

  • excess power
  • duct noise
  • erosion
  • unstable process
  • damper throttling losses

Meaning:

Oversized fan wastes money.

7. Dirty Filter Effect

New bag filter:

200 mmWG

Dirty bag filter:

350 mmWG

System curve shifts upward.

Earlier:

20 m³/sec

Now:

Maybe only 17 m³/sec

Fan unchanged.

Flow drops.

This is why dirty filters reduce production.

8. Damper Closing Effect

Closing damper increases resistance.

System curve shifts upward.

Operating point moves left.

Less airflow.

Higher pressure.

Example

Open damper:

20 m³/sec

Close partially:

15 m³/sec

Same fan.

Different system resistance.

9. VFD Effect

VFD changes fan speed.

Fan curve itself moves.

Lower speed:

less flow
less pressure

Higher speed:

more flow
more pressure

More efficient than damper control.

Final Simple Analogy

Think water pump + pipe.

Pump = fan

Pipe restrictions = system

More restrictions → less flow

Bigger pump → more flow

Actual result = balance point.

Final One-Line Formula

System:

[SP = KQ^2]

Fan:

Manufacturer curve

Operating point:

Where Fan Pressure = System Resistance

Final Industrial Understanding

Fan does not decide airflow alone.
System does not decide airflow alone.
Both negotiate.
Intersection is reality.

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