The desire to save on utility costs is common to most of us. And you must admit, the transition to the use of natural gas for cooking and heating is the most optimal way of such frugality. But ventilation in houses with gas stoves must be built according to very strict rules.
You will learn all about the requirements for the design of a kitchen exhaust system from the article we presented. We will introduce the regulation of normative documentation, detailing all aspects of this difficult issue. We will analyze standard options for organizing an air mass removal system.
Air exchange requirements
When designing ventilation in kitchens with gas stoves, it is necessary to comply with the requirements of both sanitary and fire safety standards (GOST, SNiPov, SanPiNov and SP). Gas supply of apartments and cottages is an undoubted benefit, as it allows to significantly reduce the cost of a communal apartment. But there are a number of points.
Both delivery options: main gas transported through pipes and LPG from a gas tank or cylinder are a source of danger. You can not neglect the prescriptions and forget about the safety rules.
The design and installation of kitchens with gas stoves are regulated by several documents at once. Plus there are all sorts of recommendations based on the above standards.
If the hood and air flow in the gasified kitchen room is not organized correctly, then the room can become a source of serious problems associated with open fire and a possible explosion of "blue fuel".
Gas stoves may be installed both in private houses and in multi-unit buildings. The height of the building can be no more than 10 floors. At the same time, the premises for them should have a window and be well lit by natural sunlight.
If the exhaust air in the kitchen with a gas stove is insufficient, then when the burner damps or a pipe breaks, gas will accumulate in the room and explode sooner or later
The kitchen for installing a gas stove should:
- be with ceilings with a height of 2.2 m and above;
- have ventilation with natural intake / removal of air;
- have a window that has an opening sash either at the top of the transom or window.
The cubic capacity of a room with a gas stove should be at a minimum (and preferably more):
- 8 m3 - at two rings;
- 12 m3 - at three rings;
- 15 m3 - at four rings.
In some cases, it is permissible to depart slightly from these standards, but only subject to the coordination of such deviations with inspectors from the Ministry of Emergencies and other regulatory bodies.
In order to avoid problems with the stove, the air in the kitchen should be enough for burning gas, and it should be constantly replaced by new street
When organizing air exchange in the kitchen, it is important to ensure that new air comes exclusively from the street. This will prevent air masses from entering the kitchen room with excess odors and moisture, as well as low oxygen content. Only methane or propane-butane gas stoves are not enough to work.
Air exchange rate for a kitchen with a gas stove - 100 m3/hour. Moreover, in most apartment buildings, ventilation ducts with a width of 130-150 mm of the general ventilation system are designed for a flow of up to 180 m3 / hour.
It is only required to provide the required air flow from the outside. In a private house it all depends on the project. Here you need to look at a specific example of what the existing ventilation system is designed for.
Ventilation arrangements for a gas stove
Ventilation in the kitchen where the gas stove is installed can be:
- forcibly
- with natural motivation;
- combined.
Any option is allowed. However, according to fire safety standards, air exchange in the room in question must be natural. The forced system with a fan is volatile, it is permissible to use it only as an addition.
In the presence of a gas stove, forced ventilation in the kitchen is allowed only as an additional exhaust in the appendage to the system with natural air induction
If an extractor hood with a fan and an outlet to the riser is installed in the kitchen, then for its proper operation:
- it is necessary to ensure the flow of air into the room in the proper volume;
- it is forbidden to close the ventilation duct with natural ventilation with a new outlet pipe;
- it is necessary that the vent riser is able to pass the volume of air blown into it.
If the ventilation is rebuilt under a gas stove in the cottage, then there will be a minimum of problems with the expansion and reconstruction of ventilation ducts. It only takes money and time to work.
But if a gas stove and ventilation for it are mounted in an apartment of an apartment building, then the situation is often awful. Not every high-rise building, if this was not originally laid down in the project, is designed to install gas equipment in it.
At a minimum, window and wall valves will have to be mounted for additional influx of street air. Established ventilation ducts and existing air inlets are unlikely to be designed for the required parameters.
What can and should be done?
If the existing ventilation system is capable of providing air exchange of 100 m3/ hour, it’s enough just to put the cooking stove with its connection to the gas. And you can start cooking your own food. Otherwise, when installing a gas stove, the ventilation in the apartment and the cottage will have to be modified in two directions - the first is the inflow, and the second is the air exhaust.
To organize an additional hood, it will be necessary to lay a new ventilation duct with a connection to the riser above the existing opening from natural ventilation
Additional air flow is provided by:
- drilling holes in the street exterior wall and mounting a ventilation valve therein;
- installations on kitchen windows of supply valves;
- increased clearance under the door to the kitchen.
In the general situation, air inflow is provided from the street and from other rooms of the house. But in the case of a kitchen and a gas stove, most of it should go outside.
At the same time, it is permissible that it comes from a window in the bedroom or living room, but then the clearance from the flooring under the kitchen door will need to be made larger than the standard 15–20 mm. Here the door leaf will have to be lifted 20-30 mm. If you mount it lower to the floor, then the air exchange will be insufficient.
Supply valves are recommended to be made in wall execution. Window analogues in frost can freeze and stop supplying air. The options in the wall are larger and free from icing problems.
If the house is old, then you can’t do without the installation of supply valves. Soviet-built buildings were originally designed for ventilation due to the natural influx of air through leaking doors and wooden windows.
However, double-glazed windows and doors with gaskets are now being installed everywhere. As a result, the norms of air exchange laid down in the project are violated everywhere, often due to banal ignorance.
As a result, the ventilation system does not cope with the task, and a gas stove is added, which needs additional volumes of oxygen to work. It is often impossible to provide a proper microclimate in residential premises without air supply valves in this case.
What is prohibited to do?
In old houses, ventilation ducts were often made using parts made of wood.Plus, they may contain cables for power supply and / or communication systems. In such mines, it is forbidden to remove the tap from the hood above the gas stove.
The combustion products from the gas-fired furnace have an elevated temperature, and also contain water vapor, CO and CO2. Pulling such a cocktail into the ventilation duct, which is not intended for this, is impossible.
It is allowed to vent the gas stove into ventilation ducts, which are made exclusively of non-combustible materials - concrete or steel
On the one hand, ventilation ducts in a kitchen with a gas stove should ensure proper air exchange, and on the other, exclude the possibility of fire from natural gas combustion products.
Another point is the purchase and installation of a forced-hood hood in the kitchen. Sellers of such equipment praise their goods and recommend that they purchase equipment more powerful for 900–1100 m.3/hour. However, more power in this situation is more likely harm than good.
If the ventilation hole in the wall and the shaft-riser in diameter are designed for a pass of 180-200 m3/ hour, then they will not physically allow them to pump much more through themselves.
Even if the "umbrella" will buzz at full power and push a larger volume of air, the channel will not be able to pump it. As a result, either the “hood” will work idle, or reverse thrust will form in the mine. From both options, the sense of zero.
Difficulties often also arise when the apartment is on the top floor of a high-rise building. In a similar situation, ventilation in the kitchen often works poorly. The diameter of the ventilation duct allows to ensure natural air exchange at the proper level, and there is practically no traction.
According to the requirements of regulatory documents, the air in the house ventilation with natural motivation should move at a speed of approximately 0.5–1 m / s
In order for the required draft to form, the air flow from the room must fall into a vertical pipe, and then pass through it unhindered for at least 2 meters. However, on the top floor, the air vent in the kitchen is located under the ceiling and does not provide the required distance.
From above, only the attic and to the end of the ventilation shaft, which breaks off there, remains less than half a meter. As a result, air exchange occurs, but it is too small for a gas-fired stove.
In this situation, it will be necessary to install an additional vertical pipe of the required height, otherwise it will be impossible to provide ventilation requirements in a room with a gas stove. Forced hood can solve this problem. But when the light is turned off, the fan will stop working, which is already prohibited by fire regulations.
Rules for choosing a cooker hood with forced motivation:
The successful design of a makeshift hood for a gas stove:
The most characteristic violations in ventilation systems in kitchens with gas stoves:
To prevent a kitchen with a gas stove from becoming a fire place, the ventilation system in it must be with a natural motivation and meet the requirements of SNiPs according to the norms of air exchange per hour.
And when installing an additional hood, one should not forget about ensuring the proper air flow from the street. Due to its low cost, natural gas allows saving, but it is difficult to call it completely safe. It is not worth neglecting the instructions of fire and sanitary standards.
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