ASHRAE FUNDAMENTALS SI CH 17-2017 Residential Cooling and Heating Load Calculations.pdf
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1、17.1CHAPTER 17RESIDENTIAL COOLING AND HEATING LOAD CALCULATIONSResidential Features 17.1Calculation Approach 17.1Other Methods . 17.2Residential Heat Balance (RHB) Method 17.2Residential Load Factor (RLF) Method 17.2Common Data and Procedures 17.2Cooling Load 17.8Heating Load 17.11Load Calculation E
2、xample. 17.12Symbols 17.14HIS chapter covers cooling and heating load calculationTprocedures for residential buildings, including detailed heat-balance methods that serve as the basis for cooling load calculation.Simple cooling load procedures, suitable for hand calculations, areprovided for typical
3、 cases. Straightforward heating load calculationprocedures are also included.Procedures in this chapter are based on the same fundamentals asthe nonresidential methods in Chapter 18. However, many charac-teristics distinguish residential loads, and Chapter 18s proceduresshould be applied with care t
4、o residential applications.Additional information about residential heating and cooling isfound in Chapter 1 of the 2015 ASHRAE HandbookHVAC Appli-cations and Chapter 10 of the 2016 ASHRAE HandbookHVACSystems and Equipment.1. RESIDENTIAL FEATURESWith respect to heating and cooling load calculation a
5、nd equip-ment sizing, the following unique features distinguish residencesfrom other types of buildings:Smaller Internal Heat Gains. Residential system loads are pri-marily imposed by heat gain or loss through structural componentsand by air leakage or ventilation. Internal heat gains, particularlyt
6、hose from occupants and lights, are small compared to those incommercial or industrial structures.Varied Use of Spaces. Use of spaces in residences is more flexiblethan in commercial buildings. Localized or temporary tempera-ture excursions are often tolerable.Fewer Zones. Residences are generally c
7、onditioned as a singlezone or, at most, a few zones. Typically, a thermostat located inone room controls unit output for multiple rooms, and capacitycannot be redistributed from one area to another as loads changeover the day. This results in some hour-to-hour temperature vari-ation or swing that ha
8、s a significant moderating effect on peakloads, because of heat storage in building components.Greater Distribution Losses. Residential ducts are frequentlyinstalled in attics or other unconditioned buffer spaces. Duct leak-age and heat gain or loss can require significant increases in unitcapacity.
9、 Residential distribution gains and losses cannot beneglected or estimated with simple rules of thumb.Partial Loads. Most residential cooling systems use units of rel-atively small capacity (about 5 to 18 kW cooling, 18 to 32 kWheating). Because loads are largely determined by outdoor condi-tions, a
10、nd few days each season are design days, the unit operatesat partial load during most of the season; thus, an oversized unit isdetrimental to good system performance, especially for cooling inareas of high wet-bulb temperature.Dehumidification Issues. Dehumidification occurs during cool-ing unit ope
11、ration only, and space condition control is usually lim-ited to use of room thermostats (sensible heat-actuated devices).Excessive sensible capacity results in short-cycling and severelydegraded dehumidification performance.In addition to these general features, residential buildings can becategoriz
12、ed according to their exposure:Single-Family Detached. A house in this category usually hasexposed walls in four directions, often more than one story, and aroof. The cooling system is a single-zone, unitary system with asingle thermostat. Two-story houses may have a separate coolingsystem for each
13、floor. Rooms are reasonably open and generallyhave a centralized air return. In this configuration, both air andload from rooms are mixed, and a load-leveling effect, whichrequires a distribution of air to each room that is different from apure commercial system, results. Because the amount of air s
14、up-plied to each room is based on the load for that room, proper loadcalculation procedures must be used.Multifamily. Unlike single-family detached units, multifamilyunits generally do not have exposed surfaces facing in all direc-tions. Rather, each unit typically has a maximum of three exposedwall
15、s and possibly a roof. Each living unit has a single unitarycooling system or a single fan-coil unit and the rooms are rela-tively open to one another. This configuration does not have thesame load-leveling effect as a single-family detached house.Other. Many buildings do not fall into either of the
16、 precedingcategories. Critical to the designation of a single-family detachedbuilding is well-distributed exposure so there is not a short-duration peak; however, if fenestration exposure is predominantlyeast or west, the cooling load profile resembles that of a multifam-ily unit. On the other hand,
17、 multifamily units with both east andwest exposures or neither east nor west exposure exhibit load pro-files similar to single-family detached.2. CALCULATION APPROACHVariations in the characteristics of residences can lead to surpris-ingly complex load calculations. Time-varying heat flows combineto
18、 produce a time-varying load. The relative magnitude and patternof the heat flows depends on the building characteristics and expo-sure, resulting in a building-specific load profile. In general, an hour-by-hour analysis is required to determine that profile and find itspeak.In theory, cooling and h
19、eating processes are identical; a commonanalysis procedure should apply to either. Acceptable simplificationsare possible for heating; however, for cooling, different approachesare used.Heating calculations use simple worst-case assumptions: nosolar or internal gains, and no heat storage (with all h
20、eat lossesevaluated instantaneously). With these simplifications, the heatingproblem is reduced to a basic UAt calculation. The heatingThe preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 4.1, Load Calculation Dataand Procedures.17.2 2017 ASHRAE HandbookFundamentals (SI)procedures in this chapter use t
21、his long-accepted approach, andthus differ only in details from prior methods put forth byASHRAE and others.The cooling procedures in this chapter were extensively revised in2005, based on the results of ASHRAE research project RP-1199,also supported by the Air-Conditioning Contractors of America(AC
22、CA) (Barnaby et al. 2004, 2005). Although the complexity of res-idential cooling load calculations has been understood for decades,prior methods used a cooling load temperature difference/coolingload factor (CLTD/CLF) form requiring only hand-tractable arith-metic. Without such simplification, the p
23、rocedures would not havebeen used; an approximate calculation was preferable to none at all.The simplified approaches were developed using detailed computermodels and/or empirical data, but only the simplifications were pub-lished. Now that computing power is routinely available, it is appro-priate
24、to promulgate 24 h, equation-based procedures.3. OTHER METHODSSeveral residential load calculation methods have been publishedin North America over the last 30 years. All use the UAt heatingformulation and some variation of the CLTD/CLF approach forcooling.ACCA. Manual J, 8th edition (ACCA 2016) is
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