卫生间通风排气工艺 — Bathroom Ventilation Craft
1. Overview
Proper bathroom ventilation is critical for moisture control, odor elimination, mold prevention, and indoor air quality. This guide covers exhaust fan sizing, duct routing, ventilation strategies, humidity management, and odor prevention for residential bathrooms.
2. Why Ventilation Matters
| Risk Without Ventilation | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Humidity accumulation | Mold growth on walls, ceiling, grout, and silicone |
| Odor buildup | Unpleasant living environment, lingering smells |
| Stagnant air | Elevated CO₂, VOCs from cleaning products |
| Condensation | Damage to paint, wallpaper, cabinetry, and fixtures |
| Structural damage | Rot in wall framing, ceiling joists over time |
Building Code Reference: Most residential building codes require a minimum of 50 CFM (85 m³/h) continuous ventilation for bathrooms, or 200 CFM (340 m³/h) intermittent ventilation during use.
3. Ventilation Methods
3.1 Natural Ventilation (Window)
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Applicability | Bathrooms with operable windows |
| Minimum window area | 5% of floor area (for ventilation-only) |
| Effectiveness | Good for light moisture; insufficient for heavy showers |
| Limitations | Weather-dependent, privacy concerns, energy loss in winter/summer |
Checklist — When a Window Is Sufficient:
- [ ] Bathroom has an operable window
- [ ] Window area ≥ 0.5 m²
- [ ] Climate is dry (relative humidity < 60% average)
- [ ] Shower frequency is light (1-2 per day)
- [ ] No adjacent rooms at risk from moisture migration
3.2 Mechanical Ventilation (Exhaust Fan)
| Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
| Applicability | All bathrooms, mandatory for windowless bathrooms |
| Effectiveness | Excellent — controlled airflow regardless of weather |
| Types | Ceiling-mounted, wall-mounted, inline (remote), combination fan/light/heater |
| Noise | 0.5-6.0 sones (lower is quieter) |
Recommendation: Even bathrooms with windows should have mechanical exhaust for reliable moisture control, especially in humid climates or during winter when windows stay closed.
3.3 Comparison
| Criterion | Natural | Mechanical | Combined (Best) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moisture removal | Moderate | Excellent | Excellent |
| Odor removal | Good | Excellent | Excellent |
| Energy cost | Free | ¥30-80/month | ¥30-80/month |
| Noise | None | 1.0-4.0 sones (quality units) | 1.0-4.0 sones |
| Year-round use | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| Installation cost | N/A (existing window) | ¥300-1,500 | ¥300-1,500 |
4. Exhaust Fan Sizing
4.1 Sizing by Air Changes Per Hour (ACH)
The standard for residential bathrooms is 8 air changes per hour (ACH).
Formula:
Required CFM = (Bathroom Volume in ft³ × 8 ACH) ÷ 60 minutes
Required m³/h = Bathroom Volume (m³) × 8 ACH4.2 Quick Sizing Table
| Bathroom Size | Floor Area (m²) | Ceiling Height | Volume (m³) | Min Exhaust (m³/h) | Recommended Fan (m³/h) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 3-4 | 2.7 m | 8-11 | 64-88 | 100 |
| Medium | 5-7 | 2.7 m | 14-19 | 108-148 | 150 |
| Large | 8-12 | 2.7 m | 22-32 | 172-256 | 200-250 |
| Luxury (with tub) | 12-20 | 2.7 m | 32-54 | 256-432 | 300-400 |
4.3 Sizing by Fixture Count
| Fixture | Additional CFM Required |
|---|---|
| Toilet | 50 CFM (85 m³/h) |
| Shower | 50 CFM (85 m³/h) |
| Bathtub | 50 CFM (85 m³/h) |
| Jetted tub | 100 CFM (170 m³/h) |
| Each additional fixture | +50 CFM (+85 m³/h) |
Rule: Size the fan for the greater of the ACH calculation or the fixture-based calculation.
4.4 Fan Type Selection
| Type | Installation | Noise | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ceiling-mounted | Drop ceiling / above ceiling space | Low-Medium | Standard bathrooms |
| Wall-mounted | Direct exterior wall | Medium | Retrofits, no ceiling access |
| Inline (remote) | In duct run, outside bathroom | Very low (fan is remote) | Luxury bathrooms, noise-sensitive |
| Fan/light/heater combo | Ceiling-mounted | Varies | Small bathrooms, multi-function |
| Heat recovery ventilator (HRV) | Dedicated unit | Low | Whole-house ventilation |
5. Duct Routing
5.1 Routing Principles
- Shortest path to exterior — minimize duct length to reduce static pressure loss.
- Fewest bends — each 90-degree elbow adds equivalent resistance of ~3 m of straight duct.
- Never terminate into an attic, soffit, or crawl space — must exhaust directly outdoors.
- Rigid duct preferred over flexible duct — rigid smooth-wall duct has ~50% less airflow resistance.
- Slope horizontal runs slightly downward toward the exterior to prevent condensate drip-back.
5.2 Duct Material Comparison
| Material | Airflow Efficiency | Durability | Cost | Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rigid PVC (110 mm) | Excellent | High | Moderate | Yes — preferred |
| Rigid metal (galvanized) | Excellent | High | Moderate-High | Yes |
| Semi-rigid aluminum | Good | Medium | Low | Acceptable for short runs |
| Flexible plastic hose | Poor (corrugated) | Low | Very low | Avoid if possible |
| Flexible insulated | Moderate | Medium | High | Only when insulation needed |
5.3 Maximum Duct Length by Fan Power
| Fan Rating (m³/h) | Rigid Duct Max Length | With 1 Elbow | With 2 Elbows |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 6 m | 4.5 m | 3 m |
| 150 | 10 m | 8 m | 6 m |
| 200 | 14 m | 12 m | 9 m |
| 250 | 18 m | 15 m | 12 m |
5.4 Duct Installation Checklist
- [ ] Use rigid PVC or metal ducting (minimum 100 mm / 4" diameter)
- [ ] Seal all joints with aluminum foil tape (not cloth duct tape)
- [ ] Install a backdraft damper at the exterior termination
- [ ] Use exterior wall cap with bird screen
- [ ] Insulate duct if running through unconditioned space (cold climates)
- [ ] Slope horizontal runs 1/8" per foot (10 mm per meter) toward exterior
- [ ] Support duct every 1.2 m with hanger straps
- [ ] Verify no kinks or crushing during installation
6. Humidity Control
6.1 Target Humidity Levels
| Condition | Target RH |
|---|---|
| Normal bathroom use | 40-60% |
| During/after shower | Up to 80% (temporary, should drop within 20 minutes) |
| Long-term storage areas | Below 50% |
| Winter (cold climate) | 30-40% (to prevent window condensation) |
6.2 Humidity Control Strategies
| Strategy | Implementation | Effectiveness |
|---|---|---|
| Timed exhaust fan | Run fan 20-30 minutes after shower ends | High |
| Humidity-sensing fan | Fan auto-activates when RH exceeds threshold | Very High |
| Continuous low-speed fan | Fan runs at 20-30 CFM continuously | High |
| Dehumidifier | Standalone unit for chronic humidity issues | High |
| Wipe-down routine | Squeegee glass, wipe surfaces after shower | Moderate |
| Ventilated mirror | Mirror with built-in fan or heating | Supplemental |
6.3 Recommended Fan Controls
| Control Type | Description | Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Manual switch | Standard wall switch | ¥20-50 | Basic installations |
| Timer switch | Fan runs for preset duration (10-60 min) | ¥80-200 | Most bathrooms |
| Humidity sensor | Auto-activates at set RH threshold (e.g., 60%) | ¥150-400 | High-use bathrooms |
| Motion sensor | Activates on entry; delays shutoff | ¥150-350 | Guest bathrooms |
| Smart controller | App/WiFi control, scheduling, humidity monitoring | ¥200-600 | Smart home integration |
Best Practice: Install a timer or humidity-sensing switch to ensure the fan runs long enough after bathing — this is the most common cause of mold in bathrooms.
7. Odor Prevention
7.1 Sources and Solutions
| Odor Source | Root Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Toilet | Dry P-trap, poor seal | Ensure P-trap always has water; replace wax ring if needed |
| Floor drain | Dry water seal | Pour water into unused floor drains weekly; install trap primer |
| Shower drain | Biofilm, hair buildup | Clean drain monthly; use enzyme cleaner |
| Exhaust fan duct | Mold growth in duct | Clean duct annually; ensure proper slope to exterior |
| Ventilation backflow | No backdraft damper | Install backdraft damper at exterior termination |
| Wall/floor grout | Mold and mildew | Improve ventilation; deep clean and reseal grout |
7.2 Backflow Prevention
A backdraft damper is essential to prevent:
- Odors from neighboring units (in multi-story buildings)
- Outdoor pollutants entering through the duct
- Cold/hot outdoor air infiltrating when fan is off
Types:
| Type | Mechanism | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gravity flap | Weighted flap closes by gravity | Simple, reliable, cheap | May not seal perfectly |
| Spring-loaded | Spring closes flap tightly | Better seal | Spring can wear out |
| Motorized | Powered damper syncs with fan | Best seal, quiet | Higher cost, electrical connection |
7.3 Floor Drain Maintenance
| Frequency | Action |
|---|---|
| Weekly | Pour 200 ml water into rarely used floor drains |
| Monthly | Clean drain grate, remove hair/debris |
| Quarterly | Pour enzyme-based drain cleaner |
| Annually | Inspect P-trap and replace damaged components |
8. Special Considerations
8.1 Windowless Bathrooms (暗卫)
| Requirement | Solution |
|---|---|
| Minimum exhaust | 150 m³/h fan, continuous or humidity-controlled |
| Supplemental lighting | Bright LED (≥500 lux) to compensate for no natural light |
| Moisture monitoring | Digital hygrometer to track RH levels |
| Door undercut | 12-15 mm gap at bottom for makeup air |
| Material selection | Use moisture-resistant paint, cement board, porcelain tile |
8.2 Multi-Story Building Ventilation
| Issue | Prevention |
|---|---|
| Odor transfer between floors | Individual exhaust to exterior (not shared shaft without backflow prevention) |
| Shared ventilation shaft | Install check valve on each unit's connection |
| Negative pressure | Ensure makeup air path exists (door undercut, transfer grille) |
8.3 Winter Ventilation
| Challenge | Mitigation |
|---|---|
| Cold air infiltration | Install insulated duct + exterior wall cap with thermal break |
| Condensation in duct | Insulate duct runs through unheated spaces |
| Energy loss | Use heat recovery ventilator (HRV) or run fan on timer only |
| Frozen exterior cap | Use freeze-resistant wall cap in cold climates |
9. Installation Checklist
9.1 Pre-Installation
- [ ] Calculate required airflow (ACH method and fixture method)
- [ ] Select fan type and model
- [ ] Plan duct route (measure distance, count bends)
- [ ] Verify electrical circuit capacity (typically 15A circuit)
- [ ] Check local building code requirements
9.2 Installation
- [ ] Cut ceiling/wall opening per fan template
- [ ] Mount fan housing to joist or support bracket
- [ ] Connect duct to fan outlet with foil tape
- [ ] Route duct to exterior termination point
- [ ] Install exterior wall cap with backdraft damper
- [ ] Wire fan to switch or controller
- [ ] Install fan grille
- [ ] Test operation: verify airflow, check for noise/vibration
9.3 Post-Installation Verification
- [ ] Measure airflow with anemometer or flow hood
- [ ] Verify noise level is within acceptable range (< 3.0 sones recommended)
- [ ] Check for air leaks at all duct joints
- [ ] Confirm exterior damper opens when fan runs and closes when off
- [ ] Run moisture test: shower 10 minutes, verify mirror clears within 20 minutes after
10. Maintenance Schedule
| Frequency | Task |
|---|---|
| Monthly | Clean fan grille (vacuum or wash) |
| Every 6 months | Remove grille, clean fan blades and housing |
| Annually | Inspect duct for obstructions; clean if needed |
| Annually | Check exterior wall cap for debris, bird nests |
| Every 2-3 years | Replace fan motor if showing reduced airflow |
| As needed | Replace filters on combo units |