Download | - View final version: Why houses need mechanical ventilation systems (PDF, 203 KiB)
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DOI | Resolve DOI: https://doi.org/10.4224/40002856 |
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Author | Search for: Haysom, J. C.1; Search for: Reardon, J. T.1 |
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Affiliation | - National Research Council of Canada. NRC Institute for Research in Construction
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Format | Text, Issue |
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Physical description | 4 p. |
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Subject | Ventilation |
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Abstract | A house needs a third of its air exchanged every hour. Owners of houses built before 1960 relied on air leakage through the building envelope for indoor/outdoor air exchanges. And they could, because houses then were leaky enough and wind or temperature difference saw to the necessary air movement. In the 1960s, houses became more airtight, and some were heated electrically (they did not even need a chimney). In the 1970s with its oil crisis, houses became even more airtight. With little air leakage through the building envelope, a mechanical ventilation system is required for moisture and pollutant removal. So, the question now is: how does one ventilate optimally? |
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Publication date | 1998-05-01 |
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Publisher | National Research Council of Canada. Institute for Research in Construction |
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Series | |
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Translation of | |
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Language | English |
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Peer reviewed | No |
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NRC number | NRC-IRC-9143 |
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NPARC number | 20325259 |
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Export citation | Export as RIS |
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Report a correction | Report a correction (opens in a new tab) |
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Record identifier | 13076694-f9ff-4700-905e-f979e1ddae1b |
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Record created | 2012-07-18 |
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Record modified | 2022-11-07 |
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