ASHRAE JOURN 39-11 ISM-1997 ASHRAE Journal《ASHRAE日报第39卷第11号 1997年11月》.pdf
《ASHRAE JOURN 39-11 ISM-1997 ASHRAE Journal《ASHRAE日报第39卷第11号 1997年11月》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE JOURN 39-11 ISM-1997 ASHRAE Journal《ASHRAE日报第39卷第11号 1997年11月》.pdf(80页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、COPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesCOPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling Services(Circle No. 4 on Reader Service Card) COPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Ref
2、rigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesSTD-ASHRAE JOURN 39-11 ISM-ENGL 1977 0759650 1152994% 378 If you get a little dizzy cvcry tiinc you opcn your ccllular bill, Nextel offcrs a breath of frcsh air. Our bills coinc without all thc hidden charges common to other carrier
3、s. Thcre arc no charges for roaming. No charges for landline connections. And no charges for uiiuscd scconds. Aficr thc first ininutc. your calls are rounded to the second rather than the minute. At the sanie time, our high quality Motorolaao phones come They charged you for roaming. They charged yo
4、u for landline connections. And if they could, theyd charge you for smelling salts. with fcaturcs that are uncommon to othcr carriers. Tcxt messaging, numeric paging and voice mail. Evcn ow unique Nextel Direct ConnecP feature, a single button that lets you instantly contact one or all of your co-wo
5、rkers and talk for a fraction of the cost of cellular. At Nextel. were working to create a digital - cellular service youll want to use more, not less. Something you obviously cant do if youre unconscious. GET SMART. GET NEXTEL. (Circle No. 5 on Reader Service Card) $.19(17 Nextel Coiiimunications.
6、Ail riehts resdned. Nextel. the Nextel loco. Nextel Direct Coiinect and ervice Card) . . COPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesBETHESDA, Md.-The 400-plus workshops and presentations at Healthy Build- ingsfiAQ 97 illustrate the d
7、epth of information about indoor air quality. The next step for IAQ professionals is to turn the growing body of technical data into infor- mation that practitioners can use and the public can understand. That was the message from Richard D. Wilson, an administrator with the Office of Air and Radiat
8、ion at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). “With good, useful information,” he said, “the public will make indoor air quality a prior- ity and affect change.” Wilson was a speaker at the annual IAQ conference held Sept. 27-Oct. 2 at the National Institutes of Health. More than 400 health
9、 and building experts attended the event, sponsored this year by ASHRAE, the International Society of Indoor Air Quality (ISIAQ) and Virginia Tech. Wilson said a good example of how an informed public affects IAQ policy is the change in the publics attitude towards smoking inside buildings. Other ex
10、amples include the trend towards energy-efficient, low-polluting “green buildings;” the movement by manufacturers to position products as environment-friendly; and the number of new homes with radon-resistant construction and energy-efficient design. Whats critically needed now, he said, is a public
11、 that is knowledgeable about IAQ in schools. More than 50% of US. schools have IAQ problems, and the rate of asthma among children is alarmingly high. Modern HVAC systems and better maintenance are part of the answer, but these needs usually must compete with funding for instruction. The situation i
12、s exacerbated in some school systems by rules that require low bids for contract services such as maintenance. THIS MONTHS lead article on the Munich airport illustrates what can be achieved through a single intelligent building management system. Mark Ancevic describes the massive system that serve
13、s 160 buildings, and provides comfort and safety for the 12,000 employees and 15 million passengers who use the airport each year. The system has the capacity to serve 200,000 points. Its domain ranges from power plant, to runway lights, to the terminals people-moving equipment. The lineup also incl
14、udes an article by Lew Harriman III, Dean Plager, and Doug Kosar that proposes a “ventilation load index” to determine cooling loads created by outside air. The VLI is the total load generated by lcfm (.O5 L/s) of fresh air brought from the weather to space-neutral conditions over the course of a ye
15、ar. Also in this issue is an article by Oleg P. Kishkovich, Ph.D., and Michael A. Joffe, Ph.D., that compares two methods of collecting air samples, and 1997 ASHRAE Technology Award case studies by Harry John Boody and John K. Holton, P.E. THE DECEMBER issue will have more articles on Healthy Buildi
16、ngsfiAQ 97, and the comments from Carl Jordans Forum article on automobile IAQ. Let us know your suggestions and comments. Have a great month. November 1997 COPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesCOPYRIGHT American Society of Hea
17、ting, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesCOPYRIGHT American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and AC EngineersLicensed by Information Handling ServicesSlD*ASHRAE JOURN 37-Ll ISM-ENGL L777 0757b50 il527948 87b Board Sets Timetable for NIDS Plan ATLANTA-ASHRAE has t
18、aken anoth- er step forward in its efforts to develop and maintain multidisciplinary stan- dards. It has formed a committee to act on recommendations adopted by its Board of Directors in July. Two of ASHRAEs most widely used multidis- ciplinary standards are ANSIIASHRAE Standard 62-1989: Ventilation
19、 for Ac- ceptable Indoor Air Quality and ANSI ASHRAEIIES Standard 90.1 : Energy Ef- ficient Design of New Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings. According to James E. Hill, Ph.D., a former ASHRAE president and head of the new committee, implementation plans will be developed in five areas:
20、 Developing multidisciplinary stan- dards in two versions, one for code use and one for “state-of-the-art” design. Preparing users manuals for multi- disciplinary standards. Using continuous maintenance. Providing for organizational repre- sentation on selected standards project committees. Funding
21、of expenses for members of standards project committees. “We will recommend detailed plans on how each of these recommendations should be implemented. In addition, our recommendations will include identifying which groups within ASHRAE should be responsible for implementation, a time frame to comple
22、te the work and an esti- mated fiscal impact of each step,” said Dr. Hill. The committee, known as the Multi- disciplinary Standards Implementation Committee, is ex- pected to complete its work and present a report to the Soci- etys Board of Di- rectors at ASHRAEs 1998 Winter Meeting in San Francisc
23、o, Hill said. In addition to Dr. Hill, the committees members includes: Lee W. Burgett, P.E., who serves on the Societys Board of Directors as a di- rector-at-large and who also served on the committee that formed the recom- mendations for developing multidisci- plinary standards. Donald G. Colher,
24、Ph.D., P.E., who is a Society vice president, chairs the Technology Council, and also served on the committee that formed the recommendations for developing multi- disciplinary standards. David R. Conover, who chairs Stand- ing Standards Project Committee (SSPC) 90.2, Energy Efficient Design for New
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
10000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- ASHRAEJOURN3911ISM1997ASHRAEJOURNALASHRAE 日报 39 11 1997 PDF

链接地址:http://www.mydoc123.com/p-455257.html