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3 answers

Well, the air will naturally dehumidify as the temperature of the air is dropped. In air handling units, this occurs when the coils inside connected with the air conditioning (cooling) side of the AHU cool the incoming air. This usually forms condensate on the coils that are drained off. If you have something to control the humidity level by sensing in the ductwork downstream of the AHU, you can also use the heating strip in the AHU to allow the AHU to over cool the air to remove humidity and then reheat to bring back to desired temperature.

2006-09-12 03:07:42 · answer #1 · answered by Jeffrey S 6 · 0 0

You should reduce the air temperature and then reheat it afterwards. This may not be possible if your latent load is too high (generally not the case with hospitals).

2006-09-12 08:56:57 · answer #2 · answered by absolutezero 2 · 0 0

um...pray to the right god. duh...

2006-09-12 06:03:39 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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