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Look, I'm not a ventilation specialist, I am however a specialist in air movement in pipes for central vacuuming and pneumatic transport, hence the advice to talk to a specialist in this field. Input the parameters in to AI and see the answer!
There are several challenges - enough flow to push vertically, enough air speed to mitigate condensation risk, insulation again to mitigate condensation, maintenance access to both flue and (probably) an in-line fan that will become covered in cooking grease over time. In a normal centrifugal extractor the motor isn't in the airstream, but I doubt a centrifugal fan will have enough waft for this application.
In my field, the fall-off in flow of centrifugal blowers and vacuum pumps against back-pressure is beneficial. With flow dropping to zero at around 3-400mb backpressure, it keeps systems away from the pressure regs which start at 500mb.
Back pressure increases with the square of airspeed, which is why in a ventilation system, with slow air speeds, back pressure is negligible.
There are several challenges - enough flow to push vertically, enough air speed to mitigate condensation risk, insulation again to mitigate condensation, maintenance access to both flue and (probably) an in-line fan that will become covered in cooking grease over time. In a normal centrifugal extractor the motor isn't in the airstream, but I doubt a centrifugal fan will have enough waft for this application.
In my field, the fall-off in flow of centrifugal blowers and vacuum pumps against back-pressure is beneficial. With flow dropping to zero at around 3-400mb backpressure, it keeps systems away from the pressure regs which start at 500mb.
Back pressure increases with the square of airspeed, which is why in a ventilation system, with slow air speeds, back pressure is negligible.
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