BACnet for Verkada Air Quality Sensors
Learn how to integrate your Verkada Air Quality Sensors with BACnet
Verkada Air Quality Sensors offer your organization a way to monitor essential indoor air quality factors, such as CO2, CO, PM 2.5, PM 4.0, PM 10.0, AQI, TVOC, and formaldehyde.
The Building Automation and Control Networks (BACnet) integration allows Verkada sensors to inform a building’s Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) system about an air quality metric or any sensor reading, allowing the building HVAC to respond to these indoor air quality conditions.
Verkada sensors can integrate with the Building Management System (BMS) protocol, BACnet. By integrating Verkada’s sensors with this protocol, your organization’s HVAC systems can now automatically respond to suboptimal air conditions. Learn how to configure BACnet for your Verkada Air Quality Sensors.
About BACnet
BACnet is a communication protocol specifically designed for building automation and control systems. It is an industry-standard protocol used to facilitate the exchange of data between various devices and systems within a building, such as HVAC, lighting, security, and other building automation systems.
BACnet provides a standardized way for different devices and systems from different manufacturers to communicate with each other, regardless of the underlying hardware or software implementation.
The goal of BACnet is to enable efficient and standardized communication between different building automation devices, promoting interoperability, scalability, and flexibility in the design and operation of building control systems.
Benefits of BACnet
Here are some instances where the intuitiveness of BACnet can be beneficial to your organization:
Adjusts the temperature in a room or building to save costs
Adjusts the output of dampers to increase fresh air circulation in a room
Turns on supply fans
Automatically closes windows when poor air quality is detected
Automatically turns on air filtration systems and increases outdoor airflow when the CO2 levels are high
Only runs air through filtration systems when pollution thresholds are met, to avoid unnecessary filtration when the air is clean
Automatically increases the ventilation rate in a lab when there are high levels of VOCs
Uses the SV25 light sensor to turn off the lights in a room when it is unoccupied, but light is detected
Triggers a strobe or alarm if vaping is detected
Use cases for BACnet
If your BMS, also sometimes called a Building Automation System (BAS), supports BACnet, you can use Verkada sensors as inputs to control HVAC equipment or any other equipment inside your BMS.
BACnet allows centralized control and monitoring, and by accepting various input readings from Verkada sensors, such as temperature, humidity, PM 2.5, TVOC, and CO2 among others, can be used to control the outputs to remediate the effects. For example, a sensor installed in a meeting room could trigger a high CO2 alert, which would then feed this information in turn to the BAS/BMS, which in turn controls a specific action such as powering on a ventilation fan or damper in the meeting room.
Example implementation
Scenario: You want your Verkada Air Quality sensor to monitor CO2 in a conference room and increase fresh air flow when CO2 hits 700 ppm.
Enable BACnet on the device and give it a unique device ID. See how to enable BACnet on a device.
Add the points to your BMS and use them to make HVAC decisions.

a. In this case, In2 is linked to the SV25 CO2 reading, which goes to In A which is a GreaterThanEqual function. b. If the SV25 CO2 reading is above 700 ppm, send True; otherwise, send False. c. Link the Out (the output) of that function to the input of a BooleanWritable variable; in this case, In16. In16 determines the Out boolean. d. Link the Out boolean to your damper control.
If Out is True, the damper is open.
If Out is False, the damper is closed.
FAQ
Need more help? Contact Verkada Support.
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