Indirect evaporative cooling: Difference between revisions

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{{One source|date=January 2026}}

{{One source|date=January 2026}}

”’Indirect evaporative cooling”’ (IEC) is [[evaporative cooling]] that cools air without adding moisture by using an [[air-to-air heat exchanger]]. It cools air to near the wet-bulb temperature, reducing energy consumption compared to traditional air conditioning. This method is ideal for dry climates and provides drier air than direct systems.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.seeleyinternational.com/us/commercial/products/cooling/indirect-evaporative-air-conditioning-americas/ |title=Indirect Evaporative Technology |access-date=2026-01-29}}</ref>

”’Indirect evaporative cooling”’ (IEC) is [[evaporative cooling]] that cools air without adding moisture by using an [[air-to-air heat exchanger]]. It cools air to near the wet-bulb temperature, reducing energy consumption compared to traditional air conditioning. This method is ideal for dry climates and provides drier air than direct systems.<ref>{{ web |url=https://www.seeleyinternational.com/us/commercial/products/cooling/indirect-evaporative-air-conditioning-americas/ |access-date=2026-01-29}}</ref>

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 17:34, 29 January 2026

Indirect evaporative cooling (IEC) is evaporative cooling that cools air without adding moisture by using an air-to-air heat exchanger. It cools air to near the wet-bulb temperature, reducing energy consumption compared to traditional air conditioning. This method is ideal for dry climates and provides drier air than direct systems.[1]

References

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