ASHRAE LO-09-007-2009 IEA-ECBCS Annex 41 Whole Building Heat Air and Moisture Response《IEA-ECBCS附件41整座建筑物加热、通风和水分反应》.pdf
《ASHRAE LO-09-007-2009 IEA-ECBCS Annex 41 Whole Building Heat Air and Moisture Response《IEA-ECBCS附件41整座建筑物加热、通风和水分反应》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE LO-09-007-2009 IEA-ECBCS Annex 41 Whole Building Heat Air and Moisture Response《IEA-ECBCS附件41整座建筑物加热、通风和水分反应》.pdf(8页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、88 2009 ASHRAEABSTRACTCombined heat, air and moisture (HAM) simulation at the building envelope level and building simulation have been separate activities for many decades. In HAM-models, the indoor conditions are handled as known boundary values, while all building simulation tools predict inside
2、temperatures and net energy demand without much consideration for rela-tive humidity and air pressure gradients.Things started to change with airflow modeling. That step not only allowed a better quantification of ventilation related energy consumption but also permitted a refinement of the humidity
3、 balances in the building. However, at least two facts remained poorly exploited: (1) many air flows enter and leave the building across the envelope causing a complex pattern of in- and exfiltration, indoor air washing, wind washing and air looping; (2), moisture buffering in indoor finishes, furni
4、ture and furnishings delays and dampens the inside water vapor pressure response compared to the outside. Both phenomena may have an impact on energy consumed for heating, cooling and air conditioning and influence the indoor environmental quality, while humidity transported by the adventitious air
5、flows in and across the envelope could accelerate degradation. Analyzing both facts through whole building heat, air and moisture modeling and studying the impact on energy consumption, durability and indoor environmental quality were at the core of the annex 41 activity.INTRODUCTIONAlthough it is w
6、ell known that the heat, air and moisture flows (called HAM) generated by building use and entering from outside, that the HAM flows traversing the enclosure and that the HAM flows injected by the HVAC system are in permanent and mutual balance, simulation tools and designers hardly consider that re
7、ality. Building designs are scrutinized on energy needed for heating and cooling, while HVAC-systems are dimensioned to deliver the power needed to keep the indoor temperature at comfort level even under extreme outdoor weather conditions. Indoor relative humidity however is mostly kept free floatin
8、g, as it is perceived as being less important except when the buildings function imposes full air conditioning. Few designers detail the envelope taking into account the full hygrothermal load from inside and outside, while hardly anyone considers the whole heat, air and mois-ture balance that devel
9、ops between the buildings interior, its envelope and the outside environment. This is a pity as air pressure gradients inside the building and between the build-ing and the outside generate airflows that may change the heat, air and moisture response of the envelope and the building drastically, whi
10、le buffering effects dampen indoor water vapor pressure fluctuations significantly compared to the outside. Resulting air ingress, possible rain penetration and moisture deposits in the envelope could not only negatively affect energy consumption but also trigger the envelopes durability. Simultaneo
11、usly, inside relative humidity, if not well managed, may affect perceived indoor environmental quality and become a driving force for mold and dust mite infection.Clearly, whole building heat, air, moisture response has impact on human comfort, indoor environmental quality, energy consumption and en
12、velope durability, reasons why in 2003 an IEA-ECBCS Annex, termed Annex 41, Moist-En was initiated (Hens, 2003).IEA-ECBCS Annex 41 Whole Building Heat, Air, and Moisture ResponseHugo S.L.C. Hens, PhDFellow ASHRAEHugo S.L.C. Hens was a full professor in Building Physics, Performance-based Building De
13、sign and Building Services at the Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, K.U.Leuven, Belgium. He is professor emeritus since October, 1, 2008.LO-09-007 2009, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (www.ashrae.org). Published in ASHRAE Transa
14、ctions 2009, vol. 115, part 2. For personal use only. Additional reproduction, distribution, or transmission in either print or digital form is not permitted without ASHRAEs prior written permission.ASHRAE Transactions 89STATE OF THE ARTBuilding modeling started in the fifties. From the begin-ning,
15、the objectives were quantifying the net energy demand, analyzing the ways that demand could be reduced by building related measures and getting information on the temperature without heating and cooling as this allowed evaluating over-heating. Later-on, HVAC-models were added and energy consumption
16、became the quantity focused on. Hardly any model, however, was able to quantify the air and humidity balances in the building. Instead rough estimates on infiltra-tion and ventilation were used and humidity remained untouched (ASHRAE, 2001)During the same period, the research effort on heat, air and
17、 moisture transport focused on the envelope. In the sixties, a few simple evaluation tools became popular. They scaled the moisture response down to one main probleminterstitial condensationand two steady state transport modesheat flow by conduction and water vapor flow by diffusion (Glaser, 1958, G
18、laser 1958, ASHRAE, 2001). Today highly sophisti-cated one- and two-dimensional full heat and moisture models are available that allow modeling vapor and liquid flow, that are transient in nature, that consider moisture sources such as wind-driven rain, rising damp, initial moisture, sorption and de
19、-sorption, interstitial condensation and surface condensa-tion. Some even allow quantifying some of the consequences of unfit moisture tolerance, such as hygrothermal stress and strain, mold infection, corrosion, salt transport and frost damage (Pedersen 1990) (Carmeliet 1992) (Knzel 1994) (Grnewald
20、 1997) (Sedlbauer et al. 2003) (Nicolai 2007). Examples of such models are: Match, Wufi, Latenite, Delphin and HygIRC. In Europe, the one-dimensional full models even became subject of a standard (CEN, 2003). All envelope models, however, take the indoor conditions (temperature, relative humidity, a
21、ir pressures) as known boundary values. This of course is fiction, except in case of full air conditioning, when the indoor environment is completely decoupled from outdoors. Also a correct implementation of wind driven rain and its impact on the building envelope remained a weakness. In fact, altho
22、ugh wind and wind driven rain have been a research topic for many decades, one had to wait until CFD became a commonly used tool before a turn was made from experiment and simple calculation to full simulation of rain loads on envelopes (Lacy et al., 1962) (Blocken et al., 2004).As said, the analysi
23、s of airflow patterns within a building was an important step on the road to whole building HAM analysis. Basic work on inter-zonal flow has been done by the Comis group and Annex 23 (Allard et al., 1990). The last decade, large numbers of researchers use CFD to analyze intra-zone flow (Baker et al.
24、, 1994). The linkage between the flows in the building and those in the envelope, however, is hardly established, although the study of air flows in and through envelope parts has underlined their importance for a correct evaluation of the hygrothermal response (Kronvall, 1982) (Trechsel ed., 1994)
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