Sorry guys, but that is a rather 'loose' way to approach this. There are a view more (ha, understatement) things to consider here :
- heat load of the air used to cool light
- fan performance table at a given static pressure, meaning how much resistance is the fan exposed to i.e. duct turbulence, carbon filter, overall duct length, duct turns and restrictions etc.
For example if a fan gives you a cfm delivery rate of 170 cfm, that number is meaningless without the associated static pressure at which it can deliver this airflow. so, 170cfm at .1" of static (commonly used) means that the fan can move 170 cfm (cubic feet of air per minute) as long as the fan experiences vitally no resistance (.1"), which it does not since you have ducts, hood, scrubber etc. hooked to it. A far more realistic static number would be .5"-.8", which will cut your cfm rating close to half!!! So, keep this in mind when shopping for the next fan. PERFORMANCE TABLES MATER!!!