ASHRAE IJHVAC 10-2-2004 HVAC&R Research《《HVAC&R研究》第10卷 2号 2004年4月》.pdf
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1、VOLUME 10, NUMBER 2 HVAC Walton 1993). These models represent the thermal zone with both surfacesand air nodes in a single network and present a single representation of the thermal zone to anHVAC component simulation. Researchers and engineers have long had the ability to formulatedetailed network
2、models of a thermal zone and solve them using a variety of software tools suchas SPARK (1997) or IDA (EQUA 2002). On the other hand, computational fluid dynamics (or CFD) has been used to model buildingroom airflow for nearly 30 years. Chen and van der Kooi (1988) and Negrao (1995) coupledCFD to a b
3、uilding load/energy simulation program and, later, Beausoleil-Morrison (2000)expanded these capabilities. Other coupling work between CFD and a load/energy programincludes those from Srebric et al. (2000) and Zhai et al. (2002). As pointed out by Srebric et al.(2000), a direct coupling of CFD with a
4、n energy simulation program for hourly simulation ofbuilding performance over a year is too demanding computationally. This investigation tries to systematically build up a framework that allows an easy combina-tion of different air models with load and energy models. Figure 1 diagrams the classific
5、ation ofroom air models used in this paper. Such models have been developed for more than 30 yearsand are plentiful. The goal of the framework is to allow using all such air models with theASHRAE toolkit (Pedersen et al. 2001). Although the terms nodal and zonal are used inter-changeably in the lite
6、rature, for the purposes of this study a distinction is made between them.The distinction is basically one of how strictly and how resolved the geometry of the controlvolumes is defined. A “nodal” model treats the building room air as an idealized network ofFigure 1. Classification of room air model
7、s. 2004. American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in HVAC Haghighat et al. 2001;Inard et al. 1996; Griffith and Chen 2003) and have been compared by Chen and Griffith (2002).FORMULATIONIn formulating a framework for combined room air
8、 and load models, it is desirable that theframework be simple and applicable to a variety of room air models. The starting point for thiseffort is the original heat balance model in the ASHRAE toolkit (Pedersen et al. 1997; Pedersenet al. 2001). The new formulation alters the heat balance model wher
9、ever its model equationsinclude variables for the zone air temperature. The air heat balance of the original model is con-sidered an aggregate assessment of the air systems change in enthalpy and is referred to as the“ -equation.” The air and surface domains are modeled separately. In addition to th
10、e single control volume for room air, additional subdivisions of this controlvolume are allowed for the purpose of modeling distributions of air temperature within theroom. The air in the room is assumed to be a collection of separate, essentially well-mixed con-trol volumes, where each is modeled a
11、s having the following:1. uniform state conditions such as temperature and pressure,2. constant properties such as density and specific heat,3. transparency to radiation, and4. uniform distributions of heat and mass transfer at each control volume boundary.In aggregate, the room air control volumes
12、must agree with an overall air system heat balance.Note that the assumptions for room air control volumes parallel those for surfaces:1. uniform surface temperatures2. uniform irradiation3. diffusely emitted radiation4. one-dimensional heat conduction withinThere are five distinct processes:1. outsi
13、de face heat balance2. wall conduction heat transfer3. inside face heat balance4. air system heat balance5. air convective heat transportEach inside face interacts with a specified control volume rather than all of them interactingwith a single air control volume. The term “inside face” refers to th
14、e inside face of an enclosuresurface (such as windows, walls, floor, ceiling) that faces the room air. The near-surface air isreferred to as the adjacent air control volume. The additional fifth heat transfer process accountsQsys 2004. American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning
15、Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in HVAC however, the film coefficient,hc, and the effective air temperature,Ta, are perhaps deceptively simple and are discussed inmore detail below. The sign convention here is that positive surface convection heat transfer, indicates net heat flow from t
16、he surface to the air and therefore adds to the cooling load.Equation 5 is a mean relation for an individual surface, so values for Ta, Ts, and hcare averagesappropriate for the surface. In the event that the resolution of the air model is finer than the sur-face model, the data should be averaged s
17、o that they conform to the surface area. This averagingis necessary since the underlying surface is treated as one-dimensional. Spatial Location for Determining Adjacent Air TemperatureBuilding rooms are enclosures and not semi-infinite fluid regions. Considering that Ta is avariable and not a const
18、ant, a framework for coupling air models to load/energy routinesrequires clear specification of how values for are to be determined. This air temperature isalso known as the reference temperature for convective heat transfer calculations, but the term“reference temperature” is avoided here because i
19、t implies fixing the value. For the well-mixedmodel, one obvious selection is that Tashould match the one available value (considered a goodmodel of the average air temperature). With nodal models, each surface is associated with a par-ticular node, and the result for temperature at that node is use
20、d for Ta. (Although all surfacesneed to have a node associated with them, some nodes might be associated with interior controlvolumes and not directly affect surfaces.) For zonal and CFD air models with a grid of interiorair control volumes, the basic question is what distance scale to use when dete
21、rmining Ta. A dis-tance of 0.1 m (4 in.) into the air away from a building surfaces inside face is selected as anappropriate geometrical scale for a point at which to determine Ta. The sensitivity of tempera-ture results to this distance scale is presented below. This value is chosen in view of the
22、follow-ing points: Tai TaiTstatDB() ,=TaiTsetpointTai,+=QcQc,iAhc,iTs,iTa,i() .=QcTai 2004. American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in HVAC these were used for both the zonal modelfrom Rees (1998) and Rees and Haves (2001) and the m
23、omentum-zonal model (Griffith andChen 2003). For testing a cooling load calculation, we can imagine the simulation is of a variable air vol-ume system, and the model “finds” the flow rate to meet TSetpoint that was actually fixed in theexperiment. A value for TSetpointwas extracted from the measured
24、 air temperature data by inter-polating between measured air temperature locations to obtain a value at 1.1 m from the floor.The surfaces are modeled as resistance constructions with Lis values for a U-factor of 0.36(W/m2K) for all surfaces except the west wall, which had a U-factor 0.15 (W/m2K). Ta
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