A Hybrid Air & Water Distribution System uses both air and water as carriers of thermal energy within a building.
- Air → mainly for ventilation and latent load (humidity) control.
- Water → mainly for sensible cooling/heating (temperature control).
👉 This combination makes the system more energy-efficient than all-air systems and better for comfort/IAQ than all-water systems.
🔹 System Configurations
1. DOAS + Chilled Beams (Active/Passive)
- DOAS (Dedicated Outdoor Air System):
- Supplies fresh, dehumidified outdoor air.
- Handles latent load and ventilation code compliance.
- Chilled Beams:
- Passive or active beams circulate chilled water to handle sensible load.
- Active beams use primary air from DOAS to induce room air movement.
- Result: Small ducts, excellent IAQ, efficient cooling.
2. DOAS + Fan Coil Units (FCUs)
- DOAS supplies dry ventilation air.
- FCUs (water-based) handle sensible load in rooms.
- Suitable for hotels, offices, schools.
3. Underfloor Air Distribution (UFAD) + Radiant Cooling/Heating
- UFAD system delivers conditioned air at low velocity from floor diffusers.
- Radiant panels/chilled ceilings (water-based) manage sensible loads.
- Provides thermal comfort + stratification benefits.
🔹 Working Principle
- Fresh air is conditioned & dehumidified by DOAS.
- DOAS delivers ventilation air to zones.
- Chilled beams, radiant panels, or FCUs (using water) manage most of the sensible load.
- BMS coordinates air & water flows for comfort and energy optimization.
🔹 Advantages
✅ Energy Efficiency
- Water has ~3,400× the heat capacity of air → smaller energy transport requirement.
- Reduced fan energy (smaller ducts).
✅ Improved Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)
- Ventilation air (DOAS) is 100% fresh and dehumidified.
✅ Comfort
- Better control of temperature and humidity separately.
- Reduced drafts, quieter operation.
✅ Space Saving
- Smaller ducts → higher ceiling heights, less shaft space.
✅ Sustainability
- Supports low-energy/green buildings (LEED, WELL).
🔹 Limitations / Challenges
- Condensation risk if chilled water temperature too low.
- Complex controls (coordination of DOAS + hydronic loop).
- Higher first cost than conventional all-air systems.
- Not ideal for very high latent loads without extra dehumidification.
🔹 Applications
- Hospitals & Labs (precise IAQ + temperature control).
- High-rise offices (reduced duct space + efficiency).
- Universities (lecture halls + dorms).
- Green buildings & net-zero projects.
🔹 Comparison: All-Air vs All-Water vs Hybrid
| Feature | All-Air (VAV, AHU) | All-Water (FCUs) | Hybrid (Air + Water) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Energy Efficiency | Medium | High | Very High |
| Ventilation Quality | High | Low (needs OA unit) | High |
| Duct Space | Large | Small | Medium-Small |
| Zoning Control | Good | Excellent | Excellent |
| First Cost | Medium | Low-Medium | Medium-High |
| Best Use | Conventional offices, malls | Hotels, apartments | High-performance, mixed-use buildings |
✅ In short:
Hybrid Air & Water Distribution = Air (for fresh air + humidity) + Water (for temperature control).
It delivers energy savings, comfort, and IAQ — making it the system of choice for advanced, sustainable buildings.



