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Midwest HVAC News
Michigan Cannabis Grow-Op
Increases Yields with HVAC System Retrofit. Fabric duct
combined with VRF pinpoint temperature/humidity is partially
responsible for Real Leaf Solutions’ 20-percent marijuana
harvest increase.
Like
most North American cannabis industry grow-ops, Real Leaf Solutions
(RLS), Kalkaska, Mich., is still refining its growing methods, but
the two-year-old company may have finally found a state-of-the-art
HVAC design that will help it reach optimum yields in the near
future.
Tom Beller, RLS’ co-owner and chief operations officer, believes his
latest HVAC retrofit for two 1,500-square flowering rooms is a major
step toward optimum harvest goals. It consists of fabric duct
supplied by six and eight-ton variable refrigerant flow (VRF)
systems; a combination he’ll use when doubling the operation this
year from 12,000 to 24,000 square feet. Beller’s confidence is
backed by last harvest’s 20-percent yield improvement, which he
attributes partially to the new HVAC design.
Beller’s HVAC retrofit design team was headed by mechanical
contractor, Marc Burnette, president, Superior Heating and Cooling (SHC),
Traverse City, Mich.; Brad Bonnville, regional sales manager at
fabric duct manufacturer FabricAir, Lawrenceville, Ga.; the Fujitsu
VRF team at Johnstone Supply, Traverse City; and Jeromy LaRock,
outside sales West Michigan at manufacturer’s representative, Major
Lozuaway, Grand Blanc, Mich.
Prior RLS HVAC challenges revolved around getting airflow to the
plants and their soilless peat/coca mix at the right velocity,
uniformity, temperature and relative humidity (RH). The fabric duct
solution incorporates a linear orifice array at the 4 and 8 o’clock
positions on each 20-inch-diameter. The Combi 70 fabric also
disperses approximately 12-percent of the airflow through the duct’s
permeable surface to prevent condensation. The factory-engineered
permeability and linear dispersion result in a uniform 2,500-CFM air
distribution per duct run that helps plants thrive.
Meanwhile, each flowering room’s four ceiling-hung V-II Airstage
Fujitsu evaporator units supplied by two outdoor heat pump
condensers can maintain Beller’s preferred 77°F and 56-percent RH
within a tight ±1 tolerance. SHC’s Burnette set up each room to
provide cooling/dehumidification and heating from any of the four
evaporators simultaneously, if needed.
The design is invaluable when latent and sensible heat load shifts
during light/dark room cycles create environmental changes
unsurmountable by conventional HVAC air handling equipment. Beller
said the VRF stabilizes and pinpoints temperature/RH settings
without adding portable dehumidification or humidification equipment
that other grow-ops depend on.
Story
continues below ↓
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Finding the Best
HVAC Combination
When opened in February 2019 as one of the first recreational
and medical marijuana grow-ops certified and licensed by
Michigan’s Marijuana Regulatory Agency (MRA), RLS struggled to
maintain optimum growing conditions resulting in yields “we knew
could be improved upon,” according to Beller. The all-metal
building’s flowering rooms were supplied with conventional DX
split systems. The ceiling-hung air handlers’ metal spiral
ductwork with registers every 10 feet created drafts, hot spots
and air stratification that affected yields.
The new HVAC
environment however, not only raises yields, but the enhanced air
comfort is also increasing staff productivity. “It (the flowering
room with the fabric duct/VRF system) is a totally different
environment; you get a very strange sensation when entering compared
to the other rooms,” said Tyler Pickard, RLS’s lead cultivator, who
upon entering the first time immediately gathered his cultivation
team to experience the air comfort difference.
RSL will save energy
costs as well, because fabric duct’s more uniform air distribution
was proven more efficient than metal duct/register systems,
according to a study conducted by the Iowa State University
Mechanical Engineering Department. Improved air dispersion leads to
narrow temperature room gradients, decreased HVAC run-times and up
to 24-percent less energy consumption versus metal duct, according
to the study.
Furthermore, metal duct is prone to condensation formation in humid
environments. Metal duct’s galvanization process contains toxic
silver oxides that drip into the soil with condensation, get
absorbed by the plants and ultimately infiltrate the cannabis-user.
State governments regularly check for heavy metals and can mandate a
failed cannabis harvest’s destruction. “Using antimicrobial fabric
duct is an advantage for us, because Michigan’s MRA has the
strictest heavy metal and mold test standards in the U.S.,” said
Beller.
Maintaining
Sanitary Environments
RLS cleans every flowering room after harvesting. Disassembling and
commercially laundering the fabric duct, which requires less than a
half-day for one employee, is also part of the disinfection process
even though the fabric is antimicrobial. “Cleaning metal duct is
difficult in place, and taking them down would require the added
costs of a contractor with the correct equipment,” said Beller.
“Laundering the fabric duct just makes a more sterile environment.”
Other disinfection
efforts include the air handlers’ 100-percent return air bipolar
ionization modules manufactured by AtmosAir Solutions, Fairfield,
Conn., which floods the rooms with positive and negative-charged
ions. The ions disinfect and electrically attach to airborne
contaminants thereby making them large enough for entrapment in the
air handlers’ MERV-8 media filters.
Fabric duct’s lighter
weight and installation ease enabled SHC’s two-person crew to
install five 35 to 38-foot-long duct runs in less than three days
and without heavy-duty lifting equipment or removing the facility’s
dozens of 1,000-watt, double-ended, mixed spectrum, high pressure
sodium light fixtures. Each run is suspended on a PVC-coated metal
cable hung two foot below the 14-foot-high ceilings. Metal duct
would have required twice the time, a larger installation crew and
interfered with post-cleaning fast-track planting.
RLS’s future plans include doubling its space by spring 2021,
installing more efficient lighting with variable spectrums and
retrofitting the current third and fourth flowering rooms with
fabric duct and VRF.
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About FabricAir: FabricAir designs and produces custom air
dispersion & air distribution solutions for a wide range of
applications. In 1973 we installed the world’s first fabric ducting
system, which heralded a whole new way of thinking within HVAC and
indoor climate. We continue to be at the forefront of innovation and
proudly deliver superior air dispersion across the globe through
sales companies and a substantial distributor network. Our
experienced engineers ensure ideal air flow regardless of project
complexity. We are headquartered in Denmark and all systems are
produced to measure at our facility in Lithuania. For more
information on FabricAir duct and accessories, please visit
www.fabricair.com; or contact customer and technical support
departments at sales-US@fabricair.com or by calling (502) 493-2210.
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