Heating and Air Conditioning System Humidifiers
The most common furnace humidifier is the
bypass humidifier. It makes use of the pressure differential between
the return and supply plenums on a furnace to move air through it with
minimal electrical consumption. Constructed of metal or plastic, it
consists of a cabinet, reservoir, rotating drum with motor, and float.
Preferably mounted on the supply plenum, warm air forced into the
cabinet and flows over the rotating drum. The drum is a sponge or foam
fabric stretched over a plastic frame. A small motor slowly spins the
drum through a tray of water fed from the domestic water supply and
regulated by a float valve. As the wet drum is exposed to the flow of
warm air, water evaporates and humidifies the air. Ducted into the
return air plenum, it is mixed with supply air and ducted to the
house.
The same humidifier design can be altered slightly and become a power
humidifier. With a larger cabinet and no duct to the return plenum, a fan
moves air across the wet drum or wet screens and blows it back into the
supply plenum.
Heat pump and electric furnace air is not warm enough to evaporate water
as easily as a fuel burning furnace, so a steam humidifier is needed.
Fabricated of metal, a float valve keeps the required amount of water in
the reservoir. Mounted in the return or supply ducts or plenums, line
voltage current is passed through a heating element immersed in the
reservoir to make steam. The control wiring will include a switch to turn
the blower on during operation for increased humidification even when the
thermostat is not calling for heat.
Airstream humidifiers mount in the bottom of a supply duct. Shaped like
a half of a watermelon to form a reservoir, a float valve maintains the
proper water level. Discs made of screen rotate with the help of a motor
into the water then around into the warm air stream to allow the water to
evaporate.
Two types of humidifiers spray water directly into the warm air duct
while the air is flowing. One uses the ultrasonic principal to atomize
water droplets for evaporation. Tabletop versions of this design are known
as cool mist humidifiers. The other spray type uses air and water pressure
mixed in a nozzle to atomize the water similar to an aerosol spray. These
designs are effective, but any minerals dissolved in the water will drop
out as solids and collect in the ductwork or be blown out the supply
registers as a fine powder.
The earliest furnace humidifiers were ceramic wicks stacked in a tray of
water that was suspended over the heat exchanger in the supply plenum. Very
few if any of these still exist, going the way of the old furnace that has
been torn out and replaced over the years.
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