ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS IP CH 15-2017 Fenestration.pdf
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1、15.1CHAPTER 15FENESTRATIONFENESTRATION COMPONENTS 15.1Glazing Units . 15.1Framing . 15.2Shading 15.3DETERMINING FENESTRATION ENERGY FLOW 15.3U-FACTOR (THERMAL TRANSMITTANCE) 15.4Determining Fenestration U-Factors 15.5Surface and Cavity Heat Transfer Coefficients . 15.6Representative U-Factors for Do
2、ors . 15.13SOLAR HEAT GAIN AND VISIBLE TRANSMITTANCE 15.14Solar-Optical Properties of Glazing 15.14Solar Heat Gain Coefficient 15.19Calculation of Solar Heat Gain . 15.32SHADING AND FENESTRATION ATTACHMENTS 15.33Shading. 15.33Fenestration Attachments. 15.34VISUAL AND THERMAL CONTROLS . 15.52AIR LEAK
3、AGE . 15.53DAYLIGHTING 15.54Daylight Prediction 15.54Light Transmittance and Daylight Use 15.55SELECTING FENESTRATION 15.57Annual Energy Performance 15.57Condensation Resistance . 15.58Occupant Comfort and Acceptance . 15.60Durability . 15.61Supply and Exhaust Airflow Windows . 15.62Codes and Standa
4、rds 15.62Symbols 15.64ENESTRATION is an architectural term that refers to the ar-Frangement, proportion, and design of window, skylight, and doorsystems in a building. Fenestration can serve as a physical and/orvisual connection to the outdoors, as well as a means to admit solarradiation for dayligh
5、ting and heat gain to a space. Fenestration can befixed or operable, and operable units can allow natural ventilation toa space and egress in low-rise buildings.Fenestration affects building energy use through four basic mech-anisms: thermal heat transfer, solar heat gain, air leakage/ventilation/ex
6、change, and daylighting. Fenestration can be used to positively in-fluence a buildings energy performance by (1) using glazing andframing to minimize conductive heat loss, (2) using glazing and shad-ing strategies to control solar heat gain to supplement heating andminimize cooling requirements, (3)
7、 specifying low-air-leakage fen-estration products, (4) integrating fenestration into natural ventilationstrategies that can reduce energy use for cooling and outdoor air re-quirements, and (5) using daylight to offset lighting requirements.Todays designers and builders; minimum energy standards and
8、codes; green building standards, codes, and rating programs; andenergy efficiency incentive programs are seeking more from fenes-tration systems and giving credit for high-performing products.Window, skylight, and door manufacturers are responding with newand improved products to meet these demands.
9、 With the widespreaduse of simulation software, designing to improve thermal perfor-mance of fenestration products has become much easier. Throughparticipation in rating and certification programs that require the useof this software, fenestration manufacturers can take credit for theseimprovements
10、through certified ratings.A designer should consider architectural and code requirements,thermal performance, daylight performance, air leakage, energy andenvironmental impacts, economic criteria, and human comfort whenselecting fenestration. Typically, a wide range of fenestration prod-ucts is avai
11、lable that meet the specifications for a project. Refiningthe specifications to improve energy performance and enhance a liv-ing or work space can result in lower energy costs, increased produc-tivity, and improved thermal and visual comfort.1. FENESTRATION COMPONENTSFenestration components include
12、glazing material, either glassor plastic; framing, insulation, mullions, muntin bars, dividers, andopaque door slabs; and indoor and outdoor shading devices such aslouvered blinds, drapes, roller shades, lightshelves, metal grills, andawnings. In this chapter, fenestration and fenestration systemsre
13、fer to the basic assemblies and components of window, skylight,and door systems that are part of the building envelope.1.1 GLAZING UNITSMost fenestration currently manufactured using glass contains aglazing system that is packaged in the form of a glazing unit. A glaz-ing unit consists of two or mor
14、e glazing layers that are held apart byan edge seal. Figure 1 shows the construction of a typical double-glazing unit.The most common glazing material is glass, although polymer(plastic) is sometimes used, either in the form of intermediate filmsbonded to glass, or as stand-alone glazing material po
15、pular in someskylight products. Both may be clear, tinted, coated, laminated,The preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 4.5, Fenestration. Fig. 1 Construction Details of Typical Double-Glazing Unit15.2 2017 ASHRAE HandbookFundamentals tempered, patterned, or obscured, and polymer types can be
16、 easilyshaped, textured, and profiled using several processing options.Clear glazing material transmits more than 75% of the incident solarradiation and more than 85% of the visible light. Body-tinted glasscontaining a pigment is available in many colors, all of which differin the amount of solar ra
17、diation and visible light they transmit andabsorb. Some coated glazing materials are highly reflective (e.g.,mirrors), whereas others have very low reflectance. Some spectrallyselective glazing products include coatings that have a visible lighttransmittance more than double their solar transmittanc
18、e; these aredesirable for good daylighting while minimizing cooling loads.Coatings that reduce radiant heat exchange are called low-emissivity(low-e) coatings. Laminated glass is made of two panes of glass ad-hered together. The interlayer between the two panes of glass is typ-ically plastic and may
19、 be clear, tinted, or coated. Tempered glass isdesigned for safety and shatters into pebble-sized pieces when bro-ken. Patterned glass is a durable ceramic frit applied to a glass sur-face in a decorative pattern. Obscured glass is translucent and istypically used in privacy applications.Low-e coate
20、d glass is energy efficient, improves daylighting po-tential, and enhances occupant comfort. Thus, it is now used in thevast majority of fenestration products. Low-e coatings are typicallyapplied to one of the protected internal surfaces of the glazing unit(surface #2 or #3 in Figure 1), but some ma
21、nufacturers now offerdouble- or triple-glazed products with an additional low-e coatingon the exposed room-side surface (surface #4 in Figure 1, or whatwould be #6 in triple glazing). Low-e coatings can also be applied tothin plastic films for use either as one of the middle layers in glazingunits w
22、ith three or more layers (stretched and held in place by aspacer system), or surface-applied film, where the exposed low-ecoating is protected by a very thin, thermal-IR (TIR) transparentprotective layer.A wide variety of low-e coatings are used today. Physically, theycan be divided into either soft
23、- or hard-coat types. Soft-coat low-e isfabricated using a sputtering process in a vacuum chamber. This isdone as a post-processing phase after glass has been produced, cut,and stored. The resulting coating is very fragile, especially to theeffects of moisture, so these coatings are normally protect
24、ed insidethe sealed glazing unit. Hard coatings are created using chemicalvapor deposition and are applied to the glass while it is still beingfloated in its final phases of production. This creates a durable low-e coating that can be exposed to moisture and elements.From a performance standpoint, c
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