I am an mechanical engineer that deals with ventilation & HVAC issues in research buildings from an owner's point of view (facilities operations). The attached photo is a copy from the American Conference of industrial Hygienists and show the suggested design for proper ventilation. The airflow is dependent on the cross sectional area of the length of the benches and height from the top of the bench to the top of the stall. This should be kept to a minimum.
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This cross sectional area is multiplied by 50 to obtain the air quantity in CFM (cubic feet of air per minute). Here is an example :
Assume the height of the stall (H) is 4 feet and the width is 3 feet per stall and assume 10 stalls, W = 3 X 10 = 30 feet. The area would be 4 X 30 = 120 sq ft. Per the equation in the above reference, multiple this area by 50 to obtain the air flow, Q. In this example, 50 X 120 = 6,000 CFM. For comparison a typical bathroom exhaust fan in your home is 50 CFM, so this is equivalent to 120 bathroom exhaust fans. To heat this air, the following equation is used:
Heating required = 1.08 X ( Inside Air Temperature - Outdoor Air Temperature) X Air Flow ( in CFM)
Heating Required = 1. 08 X (70 F - 0F) X 6,000 CFM ( assume indoor temp is 70 F and outdoor temp is 0F) = 453,600 BTU/H -> round to 500,000 BTU/H
For comparison, typical high efficient gas furnace for your house is about 60,000 BTU/H (output heating of unit) or about 8 residential furnaces.
If a Make Up Air unit (MAU) is used to heat the ventilation air, it typically would be direct fired, meaning that the products of combustion are mixed with the supply air, passes through the range and is exhaust by the exhaust fan. The exhaust fan and MAU work in conjunction to each other and are interlocked. An energy recovery system would be difficult due to the lead particulate in the exhaust stream and would have to be filterer prior to any heat recovery equipment (very expensive to maintain).
At my range, we do not heat the make up air and relay on a radiant tube heater running the length of the stalls and is on a 30 minute timer. The exhaust fan is also on a 30 minute mechanical timer.
Hope this help to explain how the ventilation should be handled at an indoor range.