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Lab Energy Management
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Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Lab Energy Management

Page 2: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets• One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5

households. • Keeping a sash completely closed on a VAV hood reduces the hood’s

energy consumption by 60% or more! • To encourage researchers and laboratory technicians to do this,

inspection of fume hood sashes could be part of laboratory safety inspections.

• Use 18-inch sash height • Adjust hood fans to reduce the throughput volume• Don’t block the fume hood sash • Use appropriately designed storage cabinets rather than fume

hoods to store chemicals and equipment.

Page 3: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Facts on Fume Hoos

• Close fume hood sashes when not in use. – Fact: If a fume hood is not in use, keeping the sash

wide open wastes about $1,500 in energy costs per year per hood.

• Lower fume hoods. – Fact: Lowering the fume hood height from 12

inches to 2 inches in hundreds of labs in five science buildings saved Harvard University an estimated $100,000 in utilities.

Page 4: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Refrigerators/Freezers Procedures:• Provide freezers/refrigerators with proper spacing (2-3 inches

minimum clearance from walls or obstructions) and defrost freezers at least once per year.

• Clean freezer/refrigerator filters and coils every six months.• Eliminate unnecessary freezers/refrigerators by getting rid of

unnecessary items and combining contents into fewer freezers/refrigerators.

• Instead of buying a freezer/refrigerator for additional space, eliminate old samples, solutions etc. from existing freezers/refrigerators.

• Keep refrigerators and freezers organized (give each person a section) so that clean up/removal of old samples is easier. Before a person moves on from a lab, ask them to get rid of unnecessary samples and condense their items into the smallest space possible.

• For researchers with walk-in coolers or freezers, you should properly load the unit. Overloaded refrigeration units result in disrupted airflow, while under loaded units are using more energy than needed7.

Page 5: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Lab Equipments

• Turn off power strips and unplug unused devices to stop electricity “phantom loads” Examples: Centrifuges, cold traps, fans, monitors, printers

Page 6: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Office/Desk space

• Set your monitor to go to sleep mode after 20 min of inactivity. (Start Menu> Control Panel>Power Options) – Fact: Computer monitors consume half of the energy used to power the

computer.• Turn off computers at the end of the day. (Leave on one night per week for

updates.) – Fact: IU offers the Go Green Gadget that will help monitor and reduce your

computer's energy consumption. Or visit RePower's video guides to setting your computer to go to sleep after 5 minutes.

• Ditch the screen savers. – Fact: LCD monitors don’t need them and they use unnecessary additional energy.

• Use a laptop instead of a desktop. – Fact: A laptop can save 80 – 90 % of the energy a desktop uses.

• Use the power save mode on office equipment.

Page 7: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Lighting

• Turn off lights when the lab is unoccupied.

• When working in a specific area such as a desk, use small area lamps instead of overhead lights that illuminate the entire laboratory.

• If the building design allows, maximize the use of sunlight to illuminate the lab.

Page 8: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Doors

• Some labs are located near exit doors that let hot or cold air into the laboratory. In this situation, doors to individual labs should be closed.

Page 9: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Future purchasing of laboratory equipment

• Before purchasing new equipment, look into sharing various pieces of equipment between laboratories

• Consider energy consumption factors when making new equipment purchases.

• Buy equipment with an ENERGY STAR label

Page 10: Lab Energy Management. Fume Hoods/ Safety Cabinets One fume hood uses enough energy annually to power 3.5 households. Keeping a sash completely closed.

Brainstorming suggestion

• Add thermostat for aircond at lab to set to 24oC• Change lightings at lab to T8 with reflector• Maintenance of freezer and refrigerator for whole

lab every 6 months – clean filter and coil• Only switch on fume hood when need to use• Put label to closed fume hood or open partially

only• Possibility to share freezer/refrigerator and other

equipments?• Energy saving awareness labels to be put at all

labs