ID Fans in the AHU HVAC Industry: Selection, Working Role, Problems and RFQ Inputs

In the AHU HVAC industry, ID fans are mainly used when the system needs controlled exhaust, negative pressure, fume removal, hot air removal, or dirty-air extraction instead of simple supply air movement. In normal comfort HVAC, the terminology may be supply fan, return fan, exhaust fan, or AHU fan. In industrial HVAC and process-air applications, the same duty is often discussed as an induced draft or ID fan duty because the fan pulls air through ducts, filters, coils, enclosures, hoods, or exhaust paths.

For plant teams, the important question is not only “Do we need an ID fan?” The better question is: what air is being pulled, from where, through what resistance, at what temperature, and under what operating condition?

If you need the basic working principle first, read how ID fans work before using this AHU HVAC selection guide.

What an ID fan does in an AHU HVAC system

An ID fan works on the suction side of the airflow path. It creates a pressure difference that pulls air or gas through the system and discharges it toward the outlet, stack, duct, scrubber, filter, or exhaust point.

In AHU HVAC applications, this can support:

  • Exhaust air removal from industrial buildings
  • Return air extraction from process zones
  • Negative pressure rooms or controlled exhaust areas
  • Fume and odour extraction
  • Heat removal from machinery rooms or utility areas
  • Dust-laden exhaust before filtration
  • Exhaust from ovens, dryers, furnaces, paint booths, chemical handling zones, or process enclosures
  • Ventilation support where air must be pulled through filters, dampers, coils, ductwork, or pollution-control equipment

This is different from a forced draft fan. An FD fan pushes air into a system. An ID fan pulls air out of a system. In many plant layouts, both duties may exist together, but they should not be selected as if they are interchangeable. For a deeper comparison, see forced draft fans vs induced draft fans.

Where ID fans fit inside AHU and industrial HVAC layouts

In a clean commercial AHU, the fan may be placed in the supply or return section depending on system design. In industrial HVAC, the ID fan is usually more relevant where the air path includes extraction, exhaust, or negative pressure control.

Typical locations include:

AHU HVAC dutyWhere the ID fan helpsMain selection concern
Exhaust ventilationPulls contaminated or stale air from the spaceAir volume, duct resistance, outlet path
Return air handlingPulls return air toward AHU or treatment sectionStatic pressure, balancing, noise
Fume extractionPulls vapours or odours from source pointsGas composition, corrosion, safety review
Dust-laden exhaustPulls dusty air toward cyclone, bag filter, or scrubberDust load, impeller wear, filtration resistance
Hot air removalPulls warm exhaust from machinery/process zonesTemperature, bearing arrangement, expansion
Negative pressure areaMaintains suction so air moves inward, not outwardPressure balance, make-up air, leakage
Process exhaustPulls air from ovens, dryers, furnaces, or enclosuresDuty cycle, temperature, duct layout

In simple building ventilation, an axial fan may be enough. In industrial AHU HVAC systems with higher duct resistance, filters, coils, dampers, scrubbers, cyclones, or bag filters, a centrifugal fan is often considered because it can handle pressure resistance better than a simple low-pressure exhaust arrangement. The right choice still depends on actual duty data, not only the equipment name. You can compare fan types in centrifugal vs axial flow ID fans.

ID fan, exhaust fan, return fan, and FD fan: do not confuse the duties

One common mistake in AHU HVAC fan selection is using the wrong fan name for the wrong duty.

Fan termAir movement directionCommon AHU HVAC roleSelection warning
ID fan / induced draft fanPulls air through the systemExhaust, extraction, negative pressure, process-air removalMust be selected for suction-side resistance and outlet condition
FD fan / forced draft fanPushes air into the systemSupply air, combustion air, make-up air, pressurizationNot ideal when the duty is mainly extraction
Supply fanPushes conditioned air to occupied/process areasStandard AHU supply sectionMust account for filters, coils, duct, diffusers
Return fanPulls return air back from zonesLarge HVAC return-air systemsMust coordinate with supply fan balance
Exhaust fanRemoves air from the building/process areaToilets, kitchens, process rooms, fumes, dustMay need centrifugal design if resistance is high

For HVAC supply-side discussion, also review the role of forced draft fans in HVAC systems. For extraction, negative draft, and industrial exhaust duties, the ID fan selection logic is more important.

Main selection factors for ID fans in AHU HVAC systems

When I review an ID fan requirement for AHU HVAC or industrial ventilation, I do not start with motor HP alone. I first look at airflow, static pressure, temperature, dust load, air composition, duct layout, filter resistance, impeller type, MOC, and duty cycle.

Airflow volume

Airflow decides how much air the fan must move. In AHU HVAC systems, airflow may be linked to ventilation demand, exhaust requirement, process heat load, or negative pressure requirement. Oversizing can create noise, high power consumption, and poor control. Undersizing can create poor suction, weak exhaust, overheating, odour spread, or poor air balance.

Static pressure and system resistance

This is one of the most important points. The fan does not work in free air. It works against resistance from:

  • Duct length and bends
  • Filters
  • Coils
  • Dampers
  • Louvers
  • Hoods
  • Silencers
  • Cyclones
  • Scrubbers
  • Bag filters
  • Chimney or outlet stack
  • Dirty filter condition after operation

A fan selected only on airflow without correct static pressure can fail at the actual duty point. This is why fan curves and system resistance matter in AHU HVAC fan selection. For a broader technical base, see ID fan design, selection criteria, and operation.

Temperature of air or gas

Normal comfort HVAC air is usually not a severe duty. Industrial HVAC exhaust can be different. Air may be warm, humid, dusty, corrosive, oily, or mixed with process fumes. Temperature affects air density, bearing life, motor arrangement, impeller material, and expansion allowance. High-temperature or hazardous exhaust should always be reviewed with actual process data before final specification.

Dust load and contamination

AHU HVAC systems in factories, process plants, foundries, food units, chemical plants, and pharmaceutical areas may handle more than clean air. Dust and fine particles can create impeller buildup, erosion, imbalance, vibration, and reduced suction. If the ID fan is connected to a bag filter, cyclone, or scrubber, filtration resistance must be considered in the fan duty.

For related pollution-control airflow logic, read ID fans in air pollution control systems.

Material of construction

MOC should match the air condition. Clean air may allow simpler construction. Moist, corrosive, abrasive, or hot exhaust may need a different material, coating, thickness, impeller design, or protection strategy. Do not finalize MOC only from the word “HVAC.” Industrial HVAC can carry process risk.

Impeller type

Backward curved, backward inclined, radial blade, axial, and mixed-flow designs are not selected randomly. Each has a different behaviour against pressure, dust, efficiency, noise, and maintenance. AS Engineers’ approved product data includes centrifugal blower and fan options such as backward curved, backward inclined, high-pressure radial blade, exhauster radial, high-temperature plug, and exhauster air handling designs. For a support reference, see AS Engineers’ guide to centrifugal fan fundamentals.

Noise and vibration

In AHU HVAC systems, noise can become a serious issue because fans may run close to occupied areas, production floors, utility rooms, or building structures. Vibration can come from imbalance, misalignment, poor foundation, dust buildup, bearing wear, flexible connector issues, or wrong operating point. A low-noise requirement should be discussed during selection, not after installation.

Control method

Many AHU HVAC applications need variable airflow. A VFD can help match fan speed with demand, but it must be applied correctly. The fan, motor, duct system, control sensor location, and minimum airflow requirement should be reviewed together. A VFD cannot correct a wrongly selected fan curve or badly estimated system resistance.

ID fan selection table for AHU HVAC buyers

Use this table before sending an enquiry or RFQ.

Selection inputWhy it mattersWhat to share in RFQ
Required airflowDefines fan capacityCFM, CMH, or m³/hr
Static pressureDecides fan pressure dutymmWC/mmWG, Pa, or inch WC
Air temperatureAffects density and material selectionNormal, maximum, continuous temperature
Air conditionImpacts corrosion, dust, moisture, odour, fumesClean, dusty, humid, corrosive, oily, hot
Application typeDecides fan dutyExhaust, return air, fume extraction, negative pressure
Duct layoutAdds resistance and balancing issuesDuct length, bends, dampers, filters
Filtration systemChanges resistance over timeFilter, bag filter, cyclone, scrubber, HEPA, etc.
Operating hoursAffects motor, bearing, and maintenance planningHours/day, shifts/day
Noise limitImportant near occupied spacesRequired dB level if available
Control requirementDecides VFD or damper strategyFixed speed, VFD, automatic control
Installation locationAffects arrangement and service accessIndoor/outdoor, rooftop, plant room
Existing problemHelps retrofit diagnosisLow suction, vibration, noise, high power, bearing heat

For more detailed inputs, use the checklist from ID fans key technical considerations for industrial applications.

Common problems in AHU HVAC ID fan systems

Most ID fan problems in AHU HVAC systems do not start from the fan alone. They usually come from a mismatch between fan selection, duct resistance, dirty filters, air leakage, poor balancing, or changed operating conditions.

Low suction

Low suction may happen because of undersized fan selection, high duct resistance, clogged filter, closed damper, leakage, wrong rotation, worn impeller, or system resistance higher than estimated. The fan should be checked against the actual operating duty point.

High vibration

Vibration can come from impeller imbalance, dust buildup, bearing damage, misalignment, loose foundation, poor balancing, or fan operation away from the stable region of the curve. Dusty AHU exhaust systems need more attention because buildup can change balance over time.

High noise

Noise may come from high tip speed, turbulent duct entry, damper throttling, poor inlet condition, wrong fan selection, or vibration transfer to the structure. In HVAC areas, acoustic treatment may be required, but the first step is correct fan selection and duct design.

High power consumption

High power consumption does not always mean the motor is wrong. It may indicate wrong duty point, excess airflow, damper throttling, poor control logic, dirty filters, or a fan operating outside the intended curve. Before increasing motor size, review airflow and pressure readings.

Bearing heating

Bearing heating can be caused by lubrication problems, misalignment, high temperature, overloading, vibration, poor installation, or duty mismatch. In hot exhaust or continuous-duty AHU HVAC systems, bearing and motor arrangement should be reviewed carefully.

For maintenance planning, see 5 tips for maintaining your industrial duty fan.

Where centrifugal ID fans make sense in AHU HVAC

Centrifugal ID fans are usually considered when the AHU HVAC or industrial ventilation system has meaningful resistance. This may include long ducts, filters, coils, scrubbers, dust collectors, or process hoods.

They are commonly useful for:

  • Industrial exhaust ventilation
  • HVAC return/exhaust with high static pressure
  • Dust collector or bag filter extraction
  • Scrubber exhaust
  • Fume extraction
  • Paint booth exhaust
  • Process room negative pressure
  • Hot air extraction
  • Utility plant ventilation
  • Chemical, pharma, food, steel, cement, and general manufacturing ventilation

AS Engineers’ broader centrifugal blower resources are useful here because AHU HVAC exhaust often overlaps with industrial fan selection. You can review industrial centrifugal blowers and centrifugal exhaust fans for related selection context.

When an ID fan may not be the right choice

An ID fan is not the answer for every AHU HVAC requirement.

You may not need an ID fan when:

  • The duty is simple clean-air supply
  • The airflow resistance is very low
  • A standard AHU supply fan is enough
  • The system needs pressurization, not extraction
  • The application is basic comfort ventilation with no industrial exhaust load
  • A roof exhaust fan or axial fan can handle the required airflow and pressure
  • The project requires a certified smoke-control system that must follow specific design approval and code review

This is why the duty must be defined first. The fan name comes after the airflow problem is clear.

Practical AHU HVAC RFQ checklist for ID fan selection

Before asking for an ID fan quotation, share these details:

  • Application: exhaust, return air, negative pressure, fume extraction, dust extraction, hot air removal, or process ventilation
  • Required airflow in CFM, CMH, or m³/hr
  • Required static pressure in mmWC/mmWG, Pa, or inch WC
  • Air temperature, both normal and maximum
  • Air composition: clean, dusty, moist, corrosive, oily, chemical fumes, odour, or hot exhaust
  • Dust load, if available
  • Filter, coil, scrubber, cyclone, bag filter, or other equipment in the airflow path
  • Duct size, length, number of bends, and outlet/chimney detail
  • Indoor or outdoor installation
  • Motor preference, voltage, frequency, and control method
  • Required MOC or site corrosion condition
  • Running hours per day
  • Noise or vibration limit, if applicable
  • Existing fan details, if this is a replacement or retrofit
  • Main problem: low suction, high noise, high power, frequent bearing failure, vibration, or poor air balance

At AS Engineers, fan and blower selection is reviewed based on application, density, temperature, dust load, humidity, site location, altitude, MOC, impeller blade design, and motor mounting arrangement. For AHU HVAC applications, these inputs help avoid a generic fan selection that works on paper but struggles at site.

FAQs

What is the role of an ID fan in an AHU HVAC system?

An ID fan in an AHU HVAC system pulls air through the system instead of pushing air into it. It is mainly used for exhaust, return air, negative pressure, fume extraction, hot air removal, and industrial ventilation duties where suction-side airflow control is required.

Is an ID fan the same as an exhaust fan?

Not always. An exhaust fan removes air from a space, while an ID fan is usually selected for a more defined induced-draft duty with airflow, static pressure, duct resistance, temperature, and process conditions considered. In industrial HVAC, many exhaust applications may require ID fan-style selection.

Which fan is better for AHU HVAC, centrifugal or axial?

It depends on airflow and static pressure. Axial fans can be suitable for high airflow with lower resistance. Centrifugal fans are usually considered when the system has higher resistance from ducts, filters, coils, dampers, scrubbers, cyclones, or bag filters.

What details are needed to select an ID fan for AHU HVAC?

The main details are airflow, static pressure, air temperature, dust load, air composition, duct layout, filter or equipment resistance, installation location, running hours, control method, MOC requirement, and noise or vibration limits.

Can a VFD improve ID fan performance in HVAC systems?

A VFD can help control airflow when the system demand changes, but it cannot fix wrong fan sizing, incorrect fan curve selection, poor duct design, clogged filters, or wrong static pressure estimation. The fan and system should be reviewed together before finalizing VFD control.

Conclusion

ID fans in the AHU HVAC industry are most useful when the requirement is exhaust-side airflow, negative pressure, fume extraction, dust-laden ventilation, hot air removal, or process-air discharge. The correct fan is not selected only by airflow or motor HP. It must match static pressure, duct resistance, filters, temperature, dust load, MOC, impeller design, noise limits, control method, and actual plant operating conditions.

For ID fan selection in AHU HVAC, share your airflow, static pressure, temperature, air condition, duct layout, filter or pollution-control equipment, and operating hours with AS Engineers. These details help the team review the duty condition and suggest a practical fan configuration for the application.