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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
Senior management at an audit firm requests your input on Air Balancing for the Use of SOx Abatement in HVAC Systems as part of regulatory inspection. Their briefing note explains that a facility’s SOx scrubber system has recently failed a third-party emissions test despite the scrubber unit itself showing no mechanical defects. The internal audit team has identified that the system’s total external static pressure (TESP) has increased by 15% since the last balancing report was filed six months ago. You are tasked with determining the most appropriate balancing action to ensure the abatement system operates within its design residence time while maintaining required capture velocities at the source. Which action should the balancing technician prioritize to verify the system’s performance against the original design specifications?
Correct
Correct: A multi-point pitot tube traverse is the most accurate method for determining actual airflow (CFM) in a duct system. In SOx abatement, the removal efficiency is critically dependent on ‘residence time’—the duration the air stays in contact with the abatement media (such as a chemical spray or carbon bed). If the airflow is too high, the SOx will not be properly neutralized. Verifying the actual CFM allows the technician to confirm if the system is operating within the specific volumetric parameters required for the chemical process to be effective.
Incorrect: Increasing fan speed based solely on static pressure limits is incorrect because static pressure is a resistance measurement, not a direct flow measurement; higher pressure often indicates a restriction that could actually lead to lower-than-required capture velocities. Maximizing branch airflow without a total system balance can lead to exceeding the scrubber’s capacity, reducing residence time and causing emissions failures. Replacing filters with HEPA units is a common misconception; HEPA filters are designed for particulate matter, not gaseous SOx, and their high pressure drop would likely decrease system airflow further, potentially dropping it below the necessary capture velocity.
Takeaway: Effective SOx abatement requires precise airflow balancing to maintain the specific residence time necessary for chemical neutralization or absorption.
Incorrect
Correct: A multi-point pitot tube traverse is the most accurate method for determining actual airflow (CFM) in a duct system. In SOx abatement, the removal efficiency is critically dependent on ‘residence time’—the duration the air stays in contact with the abatement media (such as a chemical spray or carbon bed). If the airflow is too high, the SOx will not be properly neutralized. Verifying the actual CFM allows the technician to confirm if the system is operating within the specific volumetric parameters required for the chemical process to be effective.
Incorrect: Increasing fan speed based solely on static pressure limits is incorrect because static pressure is a resistance measurement, not a direct flow measurement; higher pressure often indicates a restriction that could actually lead to lower-than-required capture velocities. Maximizing branch airflow without a total system balance can lead to exceeding the scrubber’s capacity, reducing residence time and causing emissions failures. Replacing filters with HEPA units is a common misconception; HEPA filters are designed for particulate matter, not gaseous SOx, and their high pressure drop would likely decrease system airflow further, potentially dropping it below the necessary capture velocity.
Takeaway: Effective SOx abatement requires precise airflow balancing to maintain the specific residence time necessary for chemical neutralization or absorption.
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
An escalation from the front office at an investment firm concerns Air Balancing for Sustainable HVAC Design Principles during client suitability. The team reports that during the due diligence phase of a high-value LEED-certified asset acquisition, the internal audit department discovered discrepancies in the HVAC commissioning logs. Specifically, the Variable Air Volume (VAV) system performance data suggests a conflict between the energy-saving goals and the actual air distribution at low-load conditions. When evaluating the risk to the firm’s ESG reporting accuracy, which finding in the air balancing report indicates the highest risk that sustainable design principles were compromised?
Correct
Correct: In sustainable HVAC design, the primary risk during air balancing of VAV systems is the ‘starvation’ of fresh air. While reducing airflow saves energy, the system must be balanced to ensure that minimum airflow setpoints are verified and maintained to meet ASHRAE 62.1 or similar indoor air quality standards. Failing to verify these minimums during the balancing process risks occupant health and invalidates the sustainability claims of the building.
Incorrect: Using a pitot tube traverse is actually a highly accurate method for main duct measurements and is often preferred over flow hoods for total system airflow. Measuring static pressure at the fan is the standard procedure for determining total external static pressure, whereas measuring at the remote box is for sensor placement, not total system performance. Using a variable frequency drive (VFD) to adjust fan speed is a modern, energy-efficient practice and a core component of sustainable design, making it a preferred method over mechanical pulley changes.
Takeaway: Sustainable air balancing must verify that energy-efficient low-flow states still provide the minimum required ventilation to maintain indoor air quality and regulatory compliance.
Incorrect
Correct: In sustainable HVAC design, the primary risk during air balancing of VAV systems is the ‘starvation’ of fresh air. While reducing airflow saves energy, the system must be balanced to ensure that minimum airflow setpoints are verified and maintained to meet ASHRAE 62.1 or similar indoor air quality standards. Failing to verify these minimums during the balancing process risks occupant health and invalidates the sustainability claims of the building.
Incorrect: Using a pitot tube traverse is actually a highly accurate method for main duct measurements and is often preferred over flow hoods for total system airflow. Measuring static pressure at the fan is the standard procedure for determining total external static pressure, whereas measuring at the remote box is for sensor placement, not total system performance. Using a variable frequency drive (VFD) to adjust fan speed is a modern, energy-efficient practice and a core component of sustainable design, making it a preferred method over mechanical pulley changes.
Takeaway: Sustainable air balancing must verify that energy-efficient low-flow states still provide the minimum required ventilation to maintain indoor air quality and regulatory compliance.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
Excerpt from a board risk appetite review pack: In work related to Air Balancing for the Use of International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) in HVAC as part of data protection at an audit firm, it was noted that the environmental controls for the primary data hall were commissioned without a certified Testing, Adjusting, and Balancing (TAB) report. The facility manager argued that the system’s high-efficiency fans and digital controls automatically satisfy IECC energy performance requirements. As an internal auditor assessing the risk to operational resilience and regulatory compliance, which of the following is the most critical concern?
Correct
Correct: The International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), specifically section C408.2.2.1, mandates that air systems shall be balanced in accordance with generally accepted engineering standards. A written report must be provided to the owner and the code official. Relying on digital controls or high-efficiency components does not waive the requirement for physical measurement and documentation of airflow to ensure the system meets design specifications for energy efficiency and ventilation.
Incorrect: While software drift and thermal guidelines are operational concerns, they do not address the specific regulatory compliance failure regarding IECC air balancing requirements. Measuring static pressure at 100% load is a technical procedure but not the primary compliance gap identified in the scenario. The Airflow Performance Index (API) and LEED certification are voluntary standards or specific metrics that do not supersede the mandatory legal requirement for a TAB report under the IECC.
Takeaway: IECC compliance requires a formal, documented air balancing report based on physical measurements to verify that HVAC systems meet design airflow and energy efficiency standards.
Incorrect
Correct: The International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), specifically section C408.2.2.1, mandates that air systems shall be balanced in accordance with generally accepted engineering standards. A written report must be provided to the owner and the code official. Relying on digital controls or high-efficiency components does not waive the requirement for physical measurement and documentation of airflow to ensure the system meets design specifications for energy efficiency and ventilation.
Incorrect: While software drift and thermal guidelines are operational concerns, they do not address the specific regulatory compliance failure regarding IECC air balancing requirements. Measuring static pressure at 100% load is a technical procedure but not the primary compliance gap identified in the scenario. The Airflow Performance Index (API) and LEED certification are voluntary standards or specific metrics that do not supersede the mandatory legal requirement for a TAB report under the IECC.
Takeaway: IECC compliance requires a formal, documented air balancing report based on physical measurements to verify that HVAC systems meet design airflow and energy efficiency standards.
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
A regulatory inspection at an investment firm focuses on Air Balancing for the Use of American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) Threshold Limit Values (TLVs) in HVAC in the context of conflicts of interest. The exam of the facility’s air quality management program reveals that the air balancing contractor is a subsidiary of the firm’s primary property management group. During a review of the most recent balancing report, an internal auditor notes that the exhaust airflow rates in the printing and mailroom areas were measured at the exact minimum required to meet ACGIH TLVs for chemical exposure, but the measurements were taken while the high-volume equipment was inactive. What is the most appropriate action for the internal auditor to take to ensure the integrity of the air balancing data and compliance with safety standards?
Correct
Correct: In the context of internal auditing and professional judgment, the presence of a potential conflict of interest (the contractor being a subsidiary of the management group) combined with non-representative testing conditions (testing during inactivity) necessitates independent verification. To ensure that ACGIH TLVs are actually met during real-world conditions, the auditor must seek objective evidence that the system performs adequately during peak load, which is when contaminant levels would be highest.
Incorrect: Accepting the report is incorrect because it ignores the lack of objectivity and the fact that the data does not reflect actual working conditions. Increasing fan speeds arbitrarily is an engineering change that may not solve the underlying balancing issue and could lead to other system imbalances or energy waste. Limiting the scope to financial reconciliation is a failure of the auditor’s responsibility to assess operational risks, especially those involving health, safety, and regulatory compliance.
Takeaway: Internal auditors must evaluate the objectivity of technical air balancing reports and ensure that safety-critical measurements like TLVs are validated under realistic operational conditions.
Incorrect
Correct: In the context of internal auditing and professional judgment, the presence of a potential conflict of interest (the contractor being a subsidiary of the management group) combined with non-representative testing conditions (testing during inactivity) necessitates independent verification. To ensure that ACGIH TLVs are actually met during real-world conditions, the auditor must seek objective evidence that the system performs adequately during peak load, which is when contaminant levels would be highest.
Incorrect: Accepting the report is incorrect because it ignores the lack of objectivity and the fact that the data does not reflect actual working conditions. Increasing fan speeds arbitrarily is an engineering change that may not solve the underlying balancing issue and could lead to other system imbalances or energy waste. Limiting the scope to financial reconciliation is a failure of the auditor’s responsibility to assess operational risks, especially those involving health, safety, and regulatory compliance.
Takeaway: Internal auditors must evaluate the objectivity of technical air balancing reports and ensure that safety-critical measurements like TLVs are validated under realistic operational conditions.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
The supervisory authority has issued an inquiry to a fund administrator concerning Air Balancing for Smoke Evacuation Systems in the context of whistleblowing. The letter states that an anonymous report alleges the smoke control system in a high-rise commercial asset was balanced using standard operating sequences rather than the dedicated emergency fire alarm mode. As the internal auditor reviewing the balancing report submitted three months ago, which procedural verification is most critical to ensure the system meets life safety requirements for pressure differentials between the smoke zone and adjacent non-smoke zones?
Correct
Correct: Smoke evacuation and control systems must be balanced in the specific operational mode they will occupy during an emergency. This involves the fire alarm control interface commanding specific fans to start or stop and specific dampers to open or close to create the necessary pressure barriers. Balancing under normal HVAC sequences fails to account for the unique pressure dynamics and airflow paths required to contain smoke and provide clear egress paths.
Incorrect: Measuring airflow in a neutral pressure state or during normal operations does not validate the system’s performance during a fire event where specific zones must be pressurized or exhausted. Using a 10% safety factor is a design or estimation buffer, not a balancing procedure that verifies actual system performance. Matching return and supply RPM to maintain neutral pressure is a standard comfort balancing goal but is often the opposite of what is required in smoke control, where intentional pressure differentials (e.g., 0.05 to 0.10 inches w.g.) are necessary to prevent smoke migration.
Takeaway: Effective air balancing for smoke control requires verifying the system’s performance under its specific emergency sequence of operations to ensure life safety pressure differentials are maintained.
Incorrect
Correct: Smoke evacuation and control systems must be balanced in the specific operational mode they will occupy during an emergency. This involves the fire alarm control interface commanding specific fans to start or stop and specific dampers to open or close to create the necessary pressure barriers. Balancing under normal HVAC sequences fails to account for the unique pressure dynamics and airflow paths required to contain smoke and provide clear egress paths.
Incorrect: Measuring airflow in a neutral pressure state or during normal operations does not validate the system’s performance during a fire event where specific zones must be pressurized or exhausted. Using a 10% safety factor is a design or estimation buffer, not a balancing procedure that verifies actual system performance. Matching return and supply RPM to maintain neutral pressure is a standard comfort balancing goal but is often the opposite of what is required in smoke control, where intentional pressure differentials (e.g., 0.05 to 0.10 inches w.g.) are necessary to prevent smoke migration.
Takeaway: Effective air balancing for smoke control requires verifying the system’s performance under its specific emergency sequence of operations to ensure life safety pressure differentials are maintained.
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
In your capacity as operations manager at a broker-dealer, you are handling Air Balancing for Disaster Preparedness in HVAC Systems during conflicts of interest. A colleague forwards you a regulator information request showing that the facility’s emergency pressurization system failed to maintain a positive pressure gradient in the designated safe room during a recent quarterly test. The regulator is concerned that the air balancing report, signed off by a vendor with a close personal relationship to the facilities director, did not reflect the actual static pressure readings observed during the audit. You need to assess the risk to the organization’s business continuity plan and the integrity of the internal controls regarding vendor management and system performance. Which of the following actions represents the most effective risk-based approach to address the discrepancy in the air balancing report while ensuring disaster preparedness?
Correct
Correct: In a scenario involving a conflict of interest and a failure of a critical safety system, the most robust risk management action is to obtain independent verification. This ensures that the technical data regarding airflow and static pressure is accurate and unbiased, which is essential for disaster preparedness and regulatory compliance. Validating the system against original design specifications ensures that the HVAC system can perform its intended function of protecting occupants during an emergency.
Incorrect: Relying on verbal assurance from a party involved in a conflict of interest fails to provide the objective evidence required for internal control and risk mitigation. Increasing maintenance frequency, while beneficial for general upkeep, does not address the specific discrepancy in the air balancing report or the potential failure of the pressurization system. Substituting the central system with portable units is a workaround that ignores the underlying technical failure and the integrity of the reporting process, which are the core issues identified by the regulator.
Takeaway: Independent validation of technical performance data is critical when conflicts of interest or regulatory discrepancies threaten the reliability of disaster preparedness systems.
Incorrect
Correct: In a scenario involving a conflict of interest and a failure of a critical safety system, the most robust risk management action is to obtain independent verification. This ensures that the technical data regarding airflow and static pressure is accurate and unbiased, which is essential for disaster preparedness and regulatory compliance. Validating the system against original design specifications ensures that the HVAC system can perform its intended function of protecting occupants during an emergency.
Incorrect: Relying on verbal assurance from a party involved in a conflict of interest fails to provide the objective evidence required for internal control and risk mitigation. Increasing maintenance frequency, while beneficial for general upkeep, does not address the specific discrepancy in the air balancing report or the potential failure of the pressurization system. Substituting the central system with portable units is a workaround that ignores the underlying technical failure and the integrity of the reporting process, which are the core issues identified by the regulator.
Takeaway: Independent validation of technical performance data is critical when conflicts of interest or regulatory discrepancies threaten the reliability of disaster preparedness systems.
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Serving as client onboarding lead at a mid-sized retail bank, you are called to advise on Air Balancing for the Use of HVAC System Diagnostics during sanctions screening. The briefing a whistleblower report highlights that maintenance logs for the bank’s primary data processing center have been manipulated to hide systemic HVAC inefficiencies. Specifically, the report indicates that while the Total External Static Pressure (TESP) on several Constant Air Volume (CAV) units is significantly higher than the manufacturer’s maximum rating, the airflow at the diffusers is being reported as exactly meeting design specifications. When performing a diagnostic audit of these systems, which of the following conclusions is most technically sound regarding the relationship between static pressure and system performance?
Correct
Correct: In a Constant Air Volume (CAV) system, the fan follows the fan laws where airflow is directly proportional to fan speed. If the Total External Static Pressure (TESP) is higher than the design maximum (indicating high resistance from dirty coils, restrictive filters, or poor duct design) but the airflow still meets design specifications, the fan must be rotating at a higher RPM than originally specified. This diagnostic indicates the system is working harder than intended to overcome resistance, leading to increased brake horsepower (BHP) and potential motor burnout.
Incorrect: Duct leakage generally causes a decrease in static pressure and a failure to deliver design airflow to the terminal outlets. Being under-amped is a result of low airflow or low load on the motor, not a cause of high static pressure. High static pressure does not increase volumetric efficiency; in fact, as static pressure increases for a given fan speed, the airflow typically decreases as the operating point moves up the fan curve.
Takeaway: High Total External Static Pressure paired with design airflow in a constant volume system typically indicates the fan is running at an elevated speed to overcome excessive system resistance.
Incorrect
Correct: In a Constant Air Volume (CAV) system, the fan follows the fan laws where airflow is directly proportional to fan speed. If the Total External Static Pressure (TESP) is higher than the design maximum (indicating high resistance from dirty coils, restrictive filters, or poor duct design) but the airflow still meets design specifications, the fan must be rotating at a higher RPM than originally specified. This diagnostic indicates the system is working harder than intended to overcome resistance, leading to increased brake horsepower (BHP) and potential motor burnout.
Incorrect: Duct leakage generally causes a decrease in static pressure and a failure to deliver design airflow to the terminal outlets. Being under-amped is a result of low airflow or low load on the motor, not a cause of high static pressure. High static pressure does not increase volumetric efficiency; in fact, as static pressure increases for a given fan speed, the airflow typically decreases as the operating point moves up the fan curve.
Takeaway: High Total External Static Pressure paired with design airflow in a constant volume system typically indicates the fan is running at an elevated speed to overcome excessive system resistance.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
How should Air Balancing for the Role of Air Balancing in Public Health be correctly understood for NCI Commercial Air Balancing Certification (NCI CAB)? In a multi-tenant commercial facility where indoor air quality (IAQ) has become a primary concern for occupants, a balancing technician is tasked with evaluating the existing HVAC system performance. When prioritizing public health outcomes during the balancing process, which approach most accurately reflects the technician’s responsibility regarding system functionality and contaminant control?
Correct
Correct: In the context of public health, air balancing is critical for ensuring that ventilation systems meet minimum outdoor air requirements for occupant health and maintain specific pressure gradients. Proper pressure relationships (such as positive pressure in clean areas or negative pressure in areas with contaminant sources) are essential to control the migration of pathogens, VOCs, and other pollutants. Verifying these volumes and pressures ensures the system functions as a health-protective barrier.
Incorrect: Focusing solely on thermal comfort ignores the necessity of contaminant dilution and removal. Maximizing total airflow by bypassing outdoor air dampers is counterproductive to public health because it eliminates the introduction of fresh air needed to dilute indoor pollutants. While filtration is important, focusing on filter pressure drop at the expense of total delivered air volume can lead to stagnant zones and inadequate ventilation, which negatively impacts indoor air quality.
Takeaway: Public health in air balancing is achieved by ensuring specified outdoor air ventilation rates and maintaining pressure differentials to control the movement of airborne contaminants.
Incorrect
Correct: In the context of public health, air balancing is critical for ensuring that ventilation systems meet minimum outdoor air requirements for occupant health and maintain specific pressure gradients. Proper pressure relationships (such as positive pressure in clean areas or negative pressure in areas with contaminant sources) are essential to control the migration of pathogens, VOCs, and other pollutants. Verifying these volumes and pressures ensures the system functions as a health-protective barrier.
Incorrect: Focusing solely on thermal comfort ignores the necessity of contaminant dilution and removal. Maximizing total airflow by bypassing outdoor air dampers is counterproductive to public health because it eliminates the introduction of fresh air needed to dilute indoor pollutants. While filtration is important, focusing on filter pressure drop at the expense of total delivered air volume can lead to stagnant zones and inadequate ventilation, which negatively impacts indoor air quality.
Takeaway: Public health in air balancing is achieved by ensuring specified outdoor air ventilation rates and maintaining pressure differentials to control the movement of airborne contaminants.
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
As the relationship manager at a listed company, you are reviewing Air Balancing for the Use of HVAC System Life Cycle Costing during periodic review when a whistleblower report arrives on your desk. It reveals that the lead technician for the recent HVAC overhaul at the regional distribution center bypassed the proportional balancing method for the Constant Air Volume (CAV) exhaust system. Instead of measuring actual branch duct velocities, the technician adjusted the main fan speed until the total system airflow matched the design specifications, then recorded the design values for individual terminals in the final report to ensure project sign-off. This report is currently being used to justify a 15-year maintenance and energy budget. What is the most critical risk associated with this falsified balancing data in the context of Life Cycle Costing?
Correct
Correct: Proportional balancing ensures that each branch receives its required share of air relative to the total system flow. By simply ramping up the main fan to meet a total flow target without balancing individual branches, the system likely operates at a higher static pressure than necessary. This leads to significantly higher energy consumption and increased mechanical stress on the fan motor and bearings. In the context of Life Cycle Costing (LCC), the falsified data masks these inefficiencies, leading to an underestimation of both energy costs and the frequency of required mechanical repairs over the 15-year period.
Incorrect: The power factor mentioned in option b is an electrical efficiency metric related to motor loads and phase alignment, not directly caused by air balancing techniques. Option c is incorrect because fire suppression certification is generally independent of the comfort or exhaust air balancing report. Option d refers to duct leakage testing methods; while important for overall system integrity, it does not address the specific risk of falsified branch balancing data and its impact on the long-term energy and maintenance projections of the LCC model.
Takeaway: Accurate air balancing data is essential for Life Cycle Costing because it reflects the true energy demand and mechanical strain of the HVAC system, which are the primary drivers of long-term operational costs.
Incorrect
Correct: Proportional balancing ensures that each branch receives its required share of air relative to the total system flow. By simply ramping up the main fan to meet a total flow target without balancing individual branches, the system likely operates at a higher static pressure than necessary. This leads to significantly higher energy consumption and increased mechanical stress on the fan motor and bearings. In the context of Life Cycle Costing (LCC), the falsified data masks these inefficiencies, leading to an underestimation of both energy costs and the frequency of required mechanical repairs over the 15-year period.
Incorrect: The power factor mentioned in option b is an electrical efficiency metric related to motor loads and phase alignment, not directly caused by air balancing techniques. Option c is incorrect because fire suppression certification is generally independent of the comfort or exhaust air balancing report. Option d refers to duct leakage testing methods; while important for overall system integrity, it does not address the specific risk of falsified branch balancing data and its impact on the long-term energy and maintenance projections of the LCC model.
Takeaway: Accurate air balancing data is essential for Life Cycle Costing because it reflects the true energy demand and mechanical strain of the HVAC system, which are the primary drivers of long-term operational costs.
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
A gap analysis conducted at a credit union regarding Air Balancing for the Use of Industrial Hygiene Principles in HVAC as part of model risk concluded that the current exhaust rates in the central document processing facility were 15% below the levels required to maintain a negative pressure environment. During the subsequent audit of the remediation plan, the internal auditor must evaluate the proposed balancing procedure to ensure it addresses the underlying hygiene risk. Which action is most critical for the balancing professional to perform to validate that the industrial hygiene objectives are met?
Correct
Correct: In the context of industrial hygiene, air balancing is used to control the movement of contaminants. For a document processing area where dust or chemicals may be present, maintaining a negative pressure relationship relative to adjacent clean areas is essential. A smoke test or cross-draft verification provides physical evidence of directional airflow, ensuring that air moves from the clean ‘banking hall’ into the ‘dirty’ processing area, which is the primary goal of containment in industrial hygiene principles.
Incorrect: Increasing supply air volume would likely pressurize the room further, potentially turning a negative pressure zone into a positive one and pushing contaminants into the banking hall. Closing return air dampers entirely is an extreme measure that could lead to system instability, excessive noise, and a lack of proper temperature control without necessarily guaranteeing the correct pressure relationship. Verifying total external static pressure is a standard mechanical check for fan performance but does not confirm the directional airflow or pressure differentials required for contaminant containment.
Takeaway: The core objective of air balancing for industrial hygiene is the verification of directional airflow and pressure differentials to ensure the containment and proper removal of contaminants.
Incorrect
Correct: In the context of industrial hygiene, air balancing is used to control the movement of contaminants. For a document processing area where dust or chemicals may be present, maintaining a negative pressure relationship relative to adjacent clean areas is essential. A smoke test or cross-draft verification provides physical evidence of directional airflow, ensuring that air moves from the clean ‘banking hall’ into the ‘dirty’ processing area, which is the primary goal of containment in industrial hygiene principles.
Incorrect: Increasing supply air volume would likely pressurize the room further, potentially turning a negative pressure zone into a positive one and pushing contaminants into the banking hall. Closing return air dampers entirely is an extreme measure that could lead to system instability, excessive noise, and a lack of proper temperature control without necessarily guaranteeing the correct pressure relationship. Verifying total external static pressure is a standard mechanical check for fan performance but does not confirm the directional airflow or pressure differentials required for contaminant containment.
Takeaway: The core objective of air balancing for industrial hygiene is the verification of directional airflow and pressure differentials to ensure the containment and proper removal of contaminants.