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Cleanrooms and Laboratories for High-Technology Industries Dale Sartor, P.E. Bill Tschudi, P.E. July 1999 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Environmental.

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Presentation on theme: "Cleanrooms and Laboratories for High-Technology Industries Dale Sartor, P.E. Bill Tschudi, P.E. July 1999 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Environmental."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cleanrooms and Laboratories for High-Technology Industries Dale Sartor, P.E. Bill Tschudi, P.E. July 1999 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Environmental Energy Technologies Division Applications Team

2 Research Staff + In-House Energy Management =

3 Opportunity High tech space such as research laboratories and manufacturing cleanrooms serve California industries of the future High tech buildings have unique environmental needs that are energy intensive Opportunities for efficiency improvements are significant - 100 million therms/year, 4 billion kWh/year, 1 GW - New construction: 2 therms/sf, 90 kWh/sf, 20 W/SF

4 Opportunities Are Real LBNL Example: 41% reduction in energy use per square foot from 1985 baseline $4.4 million/year more research based on 1985 energy prices Improved worker productivity Safer environment Improved reliability

5 Efficient Cleanrooms & Laboratories Sub-projects 1. Fume hood containment - ultra low flow hoods 2. Cleanrooms of the future 3. Airflow design 4. Information technology - Design intent documentation - Performance feedback 5. Laboratory Design Guide

6 Fume Hood Containment - Ultra Low Flow Hoods Objective: Reduce fume hood air flow requirements at least 50%

7 Ultra Low Flow Fume Hood Commercialization Bench prototype passed ASHRAE 110 test with 75% flow reduction Patent pending Partnering with laboratory hood manufacturer in alpha test Option agreement signed for product development in the microelectronics field CFD modeling being used to speed design optimization

8 Cleanrooms of the Future Objective: Improve energy efficiency and performance of Cleanrooms HVAC energy intensities are 10 to100 times higher than ordinary buildings California Cleanroom HVAC consumes 1.2 GW of power and is growing rapidly Trend towards cleaner, more energy intensive Cleanrooms HVAC savings potential estimated at 50% + Savings potential by 2015 exceeds 1.4 GW of peak capacity

9 Cleanrooms of the Future: Efficiency Measures 1. Improve motor efficiency and selection 2. Improve fan efficiency (as installed - including system effect) 3. Reduce system static pressure low face velocity/high coolant velocity coils low pressure drop filter systems low velocity (and pressure) air distribution 4. Improve chiller plant efficiency right size separate high and low temperature requirements (e.g. cool recirculated air with 60 degree water) optimize entire system 5. Optimize air flow design 6. Use advanced modeling (CFD) to optimize room design 7. Improve and integrate sensors, controls and monitoring 8. Reduce outside air 9. Improve heating system efficiency 10. Use heat and cool recovery

10 Cleanroom End-Use Energy Breakdowns

11 Current Cleanroom Work Collaboration w/industry Survey of design tools Evaluation of design and analysis programs Workshop Design Charrette Benchmarking & case studies Web site

12 LBNL Cleanrooms Web site EETD.LBL.GOV/CLEANROOMS

13 Objective: Develop airflow design criteria and tools to optimize fan power consumption Airflow Design Airflow design has extraordinary impact on energy and performance of high tech buildings. Systems approach required Design guide completed Model for dynamic multi-fan systems underway

14 Design Intent Documentation Tool Objective: Capture design intent information & performance expectations for use throughout the building’s life-cycle.

15 Design Intent Documentation Space Requirements Functional Requirements Life-Cycle Cost Energy-Efficiency Indoor Environmental Quality Thermal Quality –Room Air Temperature Range –Room Relative Humidity Range (% RH) Visual Quality Noise Criterion Air Distribution System –Overall Pressure Drop (in H20, Pa) –Ventilation –Minimum Outside Air –Air Changes (ACH) –Supply Air Enthalpy -Air Quality -Pressurization -Fume Hoods -Biological Safety Cabinets -Air Handling Units -Exhaust Performance Metrics for Laboratories: Illustrative Detail

16 Design Intent Documentation Feeds into Building Life-Cycle Information System BLISS Performance Tracking: 2

17 Field Studies / Performance Feedback Performance Metrics Database Feedback Mechanisms Objective: Provide feedback to designers and operators of actual building loads and performance (reduce oversizing)

18 Design Guide Philosophy and Decision Making Process

19 Laboratory Design Guide “I received your guidelines for “Energy Efficient Research Laboratories” today and want to really thank you. I am extremely impressed with its scope and in-depth information. I have read several published books on lab design and mechanical engineering that do not come near to communicating the amount of information that you have assembled in your design guideline.” (Frank Kutlak, NIH) “I handed my copy of your design guide to our plant division and they were in seventh heaven - everyone is very impressed. However, I now do not have a hard copy. In addition they asked for 4 more copies for their various branches…” (Steve Hagan, NIST) “The FDA is involved in the design of numerous large facilities including laboratories. I have been to the web site and found the information very interesting and useful. I have forwarded your web site address to the numerous A & E firms that the FDA is working with. (Clyde Messerly, FDA) ATEAM.LBL.GOV/DESIGN-GUIDE


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