ASHRAE LO-09-001-2009 Determining Off-Normal Solar Optical Properties of Drapery Fabrics《测定布幕的离位日光光学性能》.pdf
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1、2009 ASHRAE 3ABSTRACTThe determination of off-normal solar optical properties of drapery fabrics is particularly useful in modelling the effec-tive solar optical properties of pleated drapery. Special sample holders were designed and fabricated to facilitate measure-ments using an integrating sphere
2、 installed in a commercially available spectrophotometer. Measurements were taken for eight of the nine fabric designations documented in the ASHRAE Handbook Fundamentals. Measurements were also obtained for a sheer fabric which does not fall into any of the customary fabric designations. Semi-empir
3、ical models were developed to quantify the variation of solar optical prop-erties with respect to incidence angle. Given solar optical properties obtained at normal incidence, these models can be used to characterise the off-normal beam-beam and beam-diffuse properties of a drapery fabric. The fabri
4、c models comprise a useful component of pleated drapery models and, in turn, a valuable tool for building energy simulation. The measurement technique described in this study can be used to obtain the off-normal solar optical properties of additional flat shading devices such as roller blinds and in
5、sect screens. INTRODUCTIONSolar gain is known to offset heating load but also mani-fests itself as increased peak cooling load and increased cool-ing energy consumption. The use of shading devices to control solar gain through windows is an important research topic. This is largely true because shad
6、ing devices such as venetian blinds, roller blinds and draperies offer a cost effec-tive strategy to actively accept or reject solar gain. Solar gain can be accepted when heating is required and rejected other-wise. The ability to control solar gain is especially important for the successful operati
7、on of well insulated, energy efficient buildings. The influence of shading devices can be calculated when optical and thermal properties of the individual glazing/shad-ing layers are known. The procedure takes advantage of the fact that there is no appreciable overlap between the solar and longwave
8、radiation bands. This leads to a two-step analysis. First, solar radiation models determine the fraction of incident solar radiation directly transmitted and the fraction that is absorbed in each layer. The absorbed solar radiation in each layer then serves as a source term in the second step the he
9、at transfer analysis. A building energy simulation might include this analysis in an hour-by-hour calculation. Since the location of the sun and the incidence angle change by the hour, the solar optical properties of the individual layers must be available at any given incidence and/or profile angle
10、.The off-normal solar properties of clear and tinted glass can readily be determined (e.g., Pettit 1979, Furler 1991). Several models have also been devised to characterize coated glass (e.g., Pfrommer et al. 1995, Roos 1997, Rubin et al. 1998, Rubin et. al. 1999). In general, shading layers may be
11、characterized by making the assumption that each layer, whether homogeneous or not, can be represented by an equivalent homogenous layer that is assigned spatially-averaged “effective” optical proper-ties. This approach has been used in a number of studies (e.g., Parmelee and Aubele 1952, Farber et
12、al. 1963, Pfrommer et al. 1996, van Dijk et al. 2002, Yahoda and Wright 2005) and has been shown to provide accurate characterization of venetian blinds (e.g., Kotey et al. 2008).When solar radiation is incident on a shading layer, some portion of the radiation passes undisturbed through openings De
13、termining Off-Normal Solar Optical Properties of Drapery FabricsNathan Kotey, PhD John L. Wright, PhD, PEng Michael Collins, PhD, PEngStudent Member ASHRAE Member ASHRAE Associate Member ASHRAENathan Kotey is a graduate student, John Wright is a professor, and Michael Collins is an associate profess
14、or in the Department of Mechan-ical and Mechatronics Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, CA.LO-09-001 2009, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in ASHRAE Transactions 2009, vol. 115, part 2. For personal use
15、only. Additional reproduction, distribution, or transmission in either print or digital form is not permitted without ASHRAEs prior written permission.4 ASHRAE Transactionsin the layer and the remaining portion is intercepted by the structure of the layer. The structure may consist of yarn, slats, o
16、r some other material. The portion of the intercepted radia-tion that is not absorbed will be scattered and will leave the layer as an apparent reflection or transmission. These scat-tered components are assumed to be uniformly diffuse. In addition, a shading layer will generally transmit longwave r
17、adiation (i.e., it is diathermanous), by virtue of its openness, and effective longwave properties are assigned accordingly.Using effective optical properties and a beam/diffuse split of solar radiation at each layer, the framework used to repre-sent multi-layer systems (Wright and Kotey 2006, Wrigh
18、t 2008) provides virtually unlimited freedom to consider differ-ent types of shading layers. This framework also delivers the computational speed needed in the context of building energy simulation.Techniques for characterising the off-normal properties of fabrics and pleated draperies are not readi
19、ly available (e.g., Keyes 1967, Kotey et al. 2007). The most widely used infor-mation originated with Keyes (1967) who used visual inspec-tion to characterise fabrics by yarn colour (yarn reflectance) as dark (D), medium (M) and light (L) and by weave as open (I), semi-open (II) and closed (III). Th
20、e yarn reflectance and open-ness factor of fabrics were conveniently represented on a chart allowing the user to estimate the shading effect of a pleated drape. Using fabric transmittance and reflectance as indepen-dent variables, a similar chart was generated by Moore and Pennington (1967). Keyes (
21、1967) then reconciled the two charts. Keyes (1967) universal chart, shown in Figure 1, is the basis of the interior attenuation coefficient (IAC) values that apply to glass-drapery combinations found in ASHRAE Handbook-Fundamentals (2005). This chart offers the possi-bility of using measured (beam-t
22、otal transmittance and beam-total reflectance at normal incidence) or eye-observed optical properties (openness and yarn colour) to estimate the shading effect of pleated draperies with 100% fullness. More recently, Hunn et al. (1991) designed an apparatus to measure the bidirectional transmittance
23、and reflectance distribution of fabrics. The measurements revealed the effect of textile properties (openness of weave, fibre cross section and fabric structure) on the distribution of sunlight. Such information is particularly useful in the context of daylighting simulation. Bidirectional solar opt
24、ical properties can be incor-porated into matrix layer calculation methods (e.g., Klems 1994a and 1994b) to predict the solar gain of glazing/shading systems. However, this experimental method and the associ-ated glazing/shading system layer system analysis are not well suited to building energy sim
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