E3S Web of Conferences (Jan 2023)

An Aisle Displacement Ventilation System for Twin-Aisle Commercial Airliner Cabin

  • Wang Feng,
  • Chen Fan,
  • Zhang Tengfei (Tim)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202339601005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 396
p. 01005

Abstract

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The environmental control system in most commercial airliner cabins supplies air from shoulder and ceiling level and exhausts air at floor level on both sides of the cabin walls. The ventilation system mixes air in the cabins to create a relative uniform air temperature distribution which is great for passengers’ thermal comfort. However, the mixing ventilation also enhances airborne contaminant transfer. Many displacement ventilation methods have been proposed to use in aircraft cabins, but the disadvantages of the ventilation approach are usually creating draft on the passengers’ ankles and high air temperature stratification between passengers’ heads and feet. This investigation developed an aisle displacement ventilation (ADV) system which can reduce air temperature stratification effectively without occupying the legroom space under the seats, so it is good for passengers and crew members’ comfort and friendly for luggage storage, in addition, it can also be easily installed in aircraft cabins. By installing the system in a five-row, twin-aisle cabin mockup, our study found that the ADV system can create a low air velocity distribution in the cabin and can maintain an acceptable air temperature stratification without draft. The system created an uprising airflow which can effectively remove airborne contaminant which was generated from index passengers’ respiratory activities. The experimental data were used to validate a computational-fluid-dynamics (CFD) program. The validated CFD program was used to compare the ADV with under-seat displacement ventilation (USDV) and underfloor air distribution (UFAD) system along the aisles. The comparison results show that the ADV had obvious better thermal comfort than the other two systems, and the cabin air quality of the three ventilation systems was similar, all far better than the “perfectly-mixed” ventilated condition.