Mech_guy_al said:
I am not attempting it on my own. There are experts who are handling this problem.
Ok, great. If this project is indeed being undertaken with due dilligence, there should be a report detailing the problem and investigation into solving it. It should look something like this:
1. Start with an investigation of the process needing to be exhausted. Determine the exhaust quantity required and required size and shape of extraction system (hood?). Compare requirements with what is actually installed.
2. Measure the airflow and pressure. Compare with the requirements.
3. Evaluate the fan performance and capacity. If the ductwork system is adequate but the fan not, calculate new fan performance requirements. Compare with the fan's capabilities.
4. Size/select/recommend fan replacement or new parallel fan.
After a direction has been decided-on, design the replacement.
If such a report exists, get it and read it. If it doesn't exist, that could be cause for concern.
Since they are extremely busy (and not very helpful)
If you are in a position where you should know the details, I'd suggest finding a way to get those details from them.
I thought trying out some calculations on my own would help increase my knowledge.
Unfortunately, most real-world engineering problems are not primarily a matter of doing calculations, they are about interpretation of information, and that's not a simple/linear process but an experience-based algorithmic problem solving process. The calculations only support that and while important, are a relatively small and simple part of the effort.
For example, if you have the existing airflow and system pressure drop and you know the new airflow you want, calculating the new pressure is a simple matter of multiplying the existing pressure by the square of the airflow difference ratio.
From that you can try calculating new fan performance, but the fans don't really exactly follow the theoretical laws, so it is typically done with selection software from or by the fan vendor. And the fan vendor would never recommend mismatched parallel fan operation, so you have to be capable of understanding the software and its output well enough to do some trial and error to come up with two different but sort of linked fan selections.
So you see, it isn't a "take this data and plug it into this equation to get the answer" process.