Ventilation in a private house made of aerated concrete: options and methods of construction
Aerated concrete has gained wide popularity in recent years.More and more people are choosing this material to build their homes. It attracts with its affordable price, excellent technical characteristics and technological advantages: working with it is much easier and faster than with brick.
Often, the owner of a new house first of all considers it necessary to install electricity, heating, water and sewerage into the home, forgetting or deliberately relegating the ventilation system to the background. So is ventilation necessary in a private house made of aerated concrete? And if so, which one is better to choose? And how to do it?
You will learn everything about the importance of a ventilation system in a house made of aerated concrete blocks from our article. We will introduce you to the types and specifics of organizing communications that ensure stable standard air exchange. Let's talk about the features of their device.
The content of the article:
Why is ventilation needed and what does it affect?
For a comfortable stay of a person in a working/living/utility premises, certain microclimate parameters must be maintained: lighting, temperature, humidity, concentration of oxygen, carbon dioxide, permissible percentage of pollutants suspended in the air, etc.
You've probably noticed that sometimes even at a comfortable temperature we feel stuffy, damp and uncomfortable.Smells from the kitchen or bathrooms scatter throughout the house and do not disappear for a long time, and countless dust particles can be seen in the rays of sunlight. Unfortunately, such situations are familiar to many home owners.
The cause of all these troubles in most cases is improper operation or lack of ventilation system. After all, it is she who is responsible for removing the waste air mass from the room and supplying it with a fresh and clean flow in its place.
Since school, we know that in the process of breathing and life, a person consumes oxygen and releases carbon dioxide and moisture into the air around us. Also, a lot of moisture gets into the air when washing and drying clothes, cooking, wet cleaning, and taking a shower.
We constantly, without thinking about it, bring home dust on our clothes and things. The atmosphere within enclosed spaces is literally teeming with volatile microscopic organic and mineral contaminants and animal hair.
If there is no ventilation systems, then all moisture, dust and CO2 accumulate in the air. At the same time, the amount of oxygen, on the contrary, decreases, making our stay in the room unbearable. If you ignore this state of affairs for a long time, problems with well-being and health may arise.
Without stable air exchange in a house with walls made of aerated concrete blocks, condensation will not be removed in a timely manner. As a result, a fungus will settle in building structures, destroying both building materials and the health of the owners and household members.
Sanitary standards for ventilation
Unlike private developers, employees of design organizations and sanitary doctors are well aware of the importance of air exchange in residential buildings. Therefore, along with heating, water supply, and lighting, entire sections of regulatory documents are devoted to ventilation.
Here are some of these rules:
- SP 13330.2016 Heating, ventilation and air conditioning. Updated version of SNiP 41-01-2003;
- SanPiN 2.1.2.2645-10 “Sanitary and epidemiological requirements for living conditions in residential buildings and premises” (Section IV. Hygienic requirements for heating, ventilation, microclimate and air environment of premises);
- «SNiP 2.08.01-89*. Residential buildings" (Section 3. Heating, ventilation and air conditioning. Appendix 4 (mandatory). Design air parameters and air exchange rates in residential buildings).
Briefly, the requirements of these rules look like this:
- All residential buildings must have a ventilation system;
- The ventilation system must ensure the replacement of exhaust air with fresh air at established intervals;
- Air exhaust from the premises of a residential building should be provided through the exhaust ducts of kitchens, restrooms and bathrooms (showers).
But the following standards for the amount of air removed are established by the rules:
Room | The amount of air removed from the room |
Living room | 3m3/h per 1 m2 premises |
Kitchen with electric stove | At least 60 m3/h |
Kitchen with 2-burner gas stove | At least 60 m3/h |
Kitchen with 4-burner gas stove | At least 90 m3/h |
Bathroom | At least 25 m3/h |
Restroom | At least 25 m3/h |
Combined bathroom and toilet | At least 50 m3/h |
Let's calculate the volume of air exchange for a two-story house with four rooms with a total area of 80 m2, two combined bathrooms and a kitchen with a 4-burner gas stove:
Standard for rooms = 80 m2 * 3m3/h per 1 m2 premises = 240 m3/h;
Standard for kitchen = 90 m3/h;
Standard for bathrooms = 2 bathrooms * 50 m3/h = 100 m3/h.
TOTAL: 430 m3/h.
Exactly such air exchange it is required to provide in our conditional house for comfortable well-being and maintaining the furnishings with finishing in proper condition.
Concluding the topic of standards, it should be noted that it is important not only to achieve standard air exchange, but also not to overdo it. After all, the greater the air exchange, the higher the speed of air flow through the premises, and if its values are excessive, negative phenomena can occur - drafts.
Ventilation schemes for aerated concrete houses
In general, ventilation systems can be divided into two main groups - natural and forced (mechanical).
Natural scheme works due to temperature differences and air mass density values inside and outside the building. It is completely autonomous and operates regardless of the electricity supply. However, the closer the outside temperature is to room temperature, the worse the air exchange will be, up to a complete stop.
This is especially felt in the summer. Achieving high performance with natural ventilation is problematic. Moreover, if it is designed according to the channel principle with numerous turns and bends: the more complex the circuit, the weaker the thrust will be;
Mechanical diagram much more powerful than the natural system. It is often equipped with additional functions of heating or cooling air, a heat saving function (recovery), and the ability to integrate into the Smart Home system. This ventilation works regardless of temperature changes.
What both types of systems have in common is that it is advisable to think through both natural and mechanical ventilation at the design stage of a house and install it immediately during its construction.
Why is it important? Because the ventilation system, in most cases, is a network of metal or plastic air ducts, which need to be routed from the premises and brought to the roof.
If you do not immediately take into account all the nuances of installation, then installing ventilation in the future may be associated with many difficulties (punching or drilling holes in main walls and ceilings, the need to lay pipes from the premises of the first floor through the living rooms of the second, unsightly appearance, etc.).
Despite the apparent complexity, understanding the organizational issues in order to install ventilation in aerated concrete at home with your own hands or correctly order its installation without overpaying for equipment and work, it’s quite simple.
So, let's move on to the types of ventilation.
Subtleties of natural ventilation devices
We have already figured out that the force that makes natural ventilation work is the desire of warm air to rise upward. In order for such movement to begin, an air duct is needed to allow warm air from the room to exit to the colder street.
Air ducts are made of plastic, galvanized metal or stainless steel round pipes or profiles of square or rectangular cross-section. Also ventilation ducts can be made in the form of voids in the walls during their construction.
If the above pipes are laid in such voids, then this is called sleeved, this method is widely used, as it eliminates masonry leaks and facilitates maintenance.
With natural ventilation, the air ducts are made vertical and as straight as possible, and the number of turns and horizontal (sloping) sections is minimized, as this reduces draft. Also for better traction it is impossible narrow pipe diameter.
The exhaust openings are equipped with ventilation grilles. They are installed in the upper quarter of the walls or directly under the ceiling, since this is where the air rises and requires removal.
Air flow in natural ventilation schemes occurs through leaks in building structures, windows and doors, as well as through special supply openings located at the bottom of the house.
Plastic windows and safe doors practically do not allow air to pass through. Therefore, when installing natural ventilation in modern housing, the presence of inlet openings or valves is a prerequisite for the operation of the ventilation system.
The simplest solution is to install windows with ventilation valves. They will allow the flow of fresh air into the room without making additional holes.
But don’t despair if the windows in your house are installed without such valves. For these cases, devices built into walls are offered on the market. They have a significantly higher throughput capacity than window ones, and can also be equipped with filters, which allows the air to be purified before it is supplied to the home.
It is worth remembering that on your own wall valves they cannot ventilate the room. For them to work, the built-in exhaust or supply fan must be working. The valves simply allow air from the street to pass through them and allow you to regulate its flow by opening or closing the damper.
Natural ventilation is good for its simplicity, low cost and energy independence. It is easy to install it yourself.It can be an excellent solution for small homes.
Nuances of organizing mechanical ventilation
The difference between a mechanical ventilation system and a natural one is that the air is driven by electric fans. Thanks to this, mechanical ventilation can have a complex and long system of ventilation ducts with both vertical and horizontal sections.
Pressure losses in duct versions of mechanical ventilation are compensated by increasing the fan power. This allows you to install air ducts in all the necessary rooms without worrying about the lack of draft.
Another distinctive feature of a mechanical ventilation system is the ability to automate it. Thanks to the installation of fans with multi-stage speed control, as well as other devices that regulate the speed, direction of air flow and its temperature, mechanical ventilation allows you to achieve optimal air exchange in each room.
It is more profitable to equip a private house with a mixed ventilation system, which contains components of both gravity and forced type. In these schemes, air movement is stimulated by a fan mounted either in the supply part or in the exhaust part.
Mechanical and mixed ventilation can be local or centralized.
With local ventilation system Each room from which air is removed has its own fan. A typical example is a kitchen hood and a fan on the exhaust vent in the bathroom.
This solution is often used if for some reason the natural ventilation draft is not enough and it needs to be increased. Installation of local exhaust fans low-cost a method that you can do yourself.
Both for the natural scheme and for mechanical exhaust ventilation, it is necessary to have air flow paths through leaks, or through special supply openings or valves.
With a centralized ventilation system in the house, usually in the attic, an exhaust or supply and exhaust ventilation. Further from this unit, ventilation ducts are laid into the necessary rooms, removing exhaust air, and if the installation is a supply and exhaust system, then supplying fresh air.
Supply and exhaust ventilation units are equipped with two fans and ensure equal amounts of incoming and outgoing air. Also, such installations can be equipped with heating and filtration systems for incoming air and automation, which allows maintaining the specified temperature and air exchange parameters.
Ventilation units with recovery are equipped with a device that increases the economic effect of using the equipment.This is a recuperator that provides the opportunity to rationally manage the energy of heating systems and save on utility bills.
With any other type of mechanical ventilation, heat is simply released from the room to the street along with the exhaust air! Savings from ventilation with recovery This is especially relevant in winter, when a lot of thermal energy escapes into the ventilation pipe. At the same time, the cold air it receives from the street in return also needs to be heated to room temperature.
The recuperator is a heat exchanger through which warm air from the house and cold air from the street simultaneously pass. A number of recuperator models use additional plate heaters with freon or water.
Thus, fresh air is heated not by heating or electricity, but by previously heated air removed from the room. Heat losses when using a recuperator are minimal.
In warm weather, when it’s hot outside, the recuperator is also useful: in this case, it cools the hot air coming from the street with cooler air from the room, reducing air conditioning costs.
Unfortunately, despite its obvious advantages, recovery has two disadvantages:
- Firstly, ventilation units with recovery are many times more expensive than similar units without a recuperator;
- Secondly, recuperators can operate stably only when the outside air temperature is not lower than – 10 OWITH.At colder temperatures, the plates become covered with an ice crust.
However, even with its shortcomings, the recuperator is the best solution for systems that process all rooms in the house. Among the local options, the breather is the leader.
Breezer - This is a device for ventilation in a separate room. It consists of a ventilation duct and a housing in which are installed: an electric heater, a fan, filters, blinds and automatic control.
For ease of setup, breathers may be a remote control. Some breathers are equipped with a ceramic heat exchanger, which allows them to operate in recovery mode.
Breezers fresh air is forcibly pumped into the room, pre-filtered and, if necessary, heated. Models with a heat exchanger are capable of not only pumping air into the room, but also removing old air from it.
Self-installation in aerated concrete house breathers and valves are not difficult: you just need to drill a hole in the wall of a suitable diameter for the ventilation pipe and fix the device on the wall.
Air purification in ventilation
At the beginning of the article, it was mentioned about dust flying in the air due to improper or absent ventilation. To solve this problem, modern supply ventilation systems can be equipped with special filters to clean the air entering the room from the street.
Moreover, depending on your needs, the set of filters can be different: from coarse cleaning, which retains only large particles; to a fine cleaning that does not allow even odors and pollen to pass through.
Filters have only one drawback: they need to be changed periodically.
Chimneys of stoves and fireplaces in residential premises
If you are planning or already have a stove or fireplace in your home, then when calculating ventilation you need to keep in mind that the chimneys of stoves and fireplaces are actually also exhaust ventilation.
In a cold state, chimneys work like a regular natural exhaust, and when burning wood, this effect is enhanced significantly, since a large amount of air is consumed for combustion.
And although chimneys cannot fully perform the function of exhaust ventilation, their presence must be taken into account when determining the size of the supply openings so that they can provide the required supply of fresh air both for the operation of the main ventilation and for the operation of the heating device.
Personal installation of the ventilation system
Now on the Internet there is any information about the selection and installation of ventilation systems, which you can easily build with your own hands in a house made of aerated concrete. In a hardware store you can freely buy ventilation ducts, fans or serious ventilation units.
The only thing that is better to entrust to designers is the calculation of ventilation, because it is unlikely to be possible to do it yourself without having the knowledge.
Correct calculation is especially important if you plan to use natural ventilation, because in this case it is important to choose the right quantity and cross-section ventilation ductsso that they provide the necessary draft and air exchange.
If you plan to install mechanical ventilation, then an approximate calculation of its performance can be made based on standards, as in the example indicated at the beginning of this article. To do this, you need to calculate the standard ventilation value for your home and increase this value by 10-20% to compensate for losses when air moves through ventilation ducts.
As for the installation of ventilation itself, for people who build a house with their own hands, this is usually nothing complicated.
Ventilation ducts are assembled like a construction set, when one part is freely inserted into another. A large number of lengths, shapes and sections of channels, as well as various bends, tees, transitions, valves, gate valves and other products allow you to assemble a ventilation duct of any configuration.
Also, thanks to standardization of sizes, ventilation ducts can be easily connected to a wide variety of supply, exhaust and supply and exhaust mechanical ventilation installations.
By the way, the choice of such installations and their manufacturers is also large: from budget ones with simple functionality to premium ones with full automation.
Conclusions and useful video on the topic
The following video will introduce you to the features of the air exchange system in a house made of aerated concrete:
Correctly selected and installed ventilation in the house from aerated block - This is the key to good health and well-being of household members. Natural ventilation is suitable for small houses, but for large buildings with many rooms, a mechanical system is the best solution.
You can select and install ventilation either independently or by entrusting it to builders, but in both cases it is recommended to do this at the design (planning) and construction stage of the house.
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