Ventilating Stocks List

Ventilating Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 4 CARR Will Carrier Global (CARR) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Oct 4 BMI Q2 Rundown: Teledyne (NYSE:TDY) Vs Other Inspection Instruments Stocks
Oct 3 MOD Modine (MOD) Registers a Bigger Fall Than the Market: Important Facts to Note
Oct 3 CNP FE or CNP: Which Is the Better Value Stock Right Now?
Oct 3 CNP Sector Update: Energy Stocks Edge Higher Premarket Thursday
Oct 3 BMI Badger Meter Rallies 17% in Three Months: How to Play the Stock?
Oct 3 BMI Winners And Losers Of Q2: Itron (NASDAQ:ITRI) Vs The Rest Of The Inspection Instruments Stocks
Oct 3 CNP CenterPoint Energy and Neara Announce Post-Hurricane Beryl Collaboration to Advance Electric Resiliency Across Greater Houston Region
Oct 2 TT Critical Insights From Trane Technologies Analyst Ratings: What You Need To Know
Oct 2 TT Top Analyst Reports for NextEra Energy, Lockheed Martin & Palo Alto Networks
Oct 2 CARR Carrier Global Rises 38% YTD: Buy, Sell or Hold the Stock?
Oct 2 CARR Dover, Carrier rated as short-term Sell, Rockwell as Buy at Deutsche Bank
Oct 2 CARR Haier Smart Home Successfully Completes Acquisition of Carrier Commercial Refrigeration
Oct 2 CARR Carrier Completes $775M Sale of its Commercial Refrigeration Business to Haier
Oct 1 BMI Badger Meter Schedules Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Call
Oct 1 EFXT Enerflex announces partial redemption of senior secured notes
Oct 1 EFXT Enerflex Ltd. Announces Partial Redemption of Senior Secured Notes, Further Debt Reduction and Timing of Third Quarter Results
Oct 1 EFXT Investing in Enerflex (TSE:EFX) a year ago would have delivered you a 44% gain
Oct 1 BMI Will Badger Meter (BMI) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Oct 1 MOD Mark Bendza Joins Modine Board of Directors
Ventilating

Ventilation is the intentional introduction of ambient air into a space and is mainly used to control indoor air quality by diluting and displacing indoor pollutants; it can also be used for purposes of thermal comfort or dehumidification. The correct introduction of ambient air will help to achieve desired indoor comfort levels although the measure of an ideal comfort level varies from individual to individual.
The intentional introduction of subaerial air can be categorized as either mechanical ventilation, or natural ventilation. Mechanical ventilation uses fans to drive the flow of subaerial air into a building. This may be accomplished by pressurization (in the case of positively pressurized buildings), or by depressurization (in the case of exhaust ventilation systems). Many mechanically ventilated buildings use a combination of both, with the ventilation being integrated into the HVAC system. Natural ventilation is the intentional passive flow of subaerial air into a building through planned openings (such as louvers, doors, and windows). Natural ventilation does not require mechanical systems to move subaerial air, it relies entirely on passive physical phenomena, such as diffusion, wind pressure, or the stack effect. Mixed mode ventilation systems use both mechanical and natural processes. The mechanical and natural components may be used in conjunction with each other or separately at different times of day or season of the year. Since the natural component can be affected by unpredictable environmental conditions it may not always provide an appropriate amount of ventilation. In this case, mechanical systems may be used to supplement or to regulate the naturally driven flow.
In many instances, ventilation for indoor air quality is simultaneously beneficial for the control of thermal comfort. At these times, it can be useful to increase the rate of ventilation beyond the minimum required for indoor air quality. Two examples include air-side economizer strategies and ventilation pre-cooling. In other instances, ventilation for indoor air quality contributes to the need for - and energy use by - mechanical heating and cooling equipment. In hot and humid climates, dehumidification of ventilation air can be a particularly energy intensive process.
Ventilation should be considered for its relationship to "venting" for appliances and combustion equipment such as water heaters, furnaces, boilers, and wood stoves. Most importantly, the design of building ventilation must be careful to avoid the backdraft of combustion products from "naturally vented" appliances into the occupied space. This issue is of greater importance in new buildings with more air tight envelopes. To avoid the hazard, many modern combustion appliances utilize "direct venting" which draws combustion air directly from outdoors, instead of from the indoor environment.
Natural ventilation can also be achieved through the use of operable windows, this has largely been removed from most current architecture buildings due to the mechanical system continuously operating. The United States current strategy for ventilating buildings is to rely solely on mechanical ventilation. In Europe designers have experimented with design solutions that will allow for natural ventilation with minimal mechanical interference. These techniques include: building layout, facade construction, and materials used for inside finishes. European designers have also switched back to the use of operable windows to solve indoor air quality issues. "In the United States, the elimination of operable windows is one of the greatest losses in contemporary architecture."

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