ASHRAE LO-09-086-2009 A Method for Modifying Ventilation Airflow Rates to Achieve Equivalent Occupant Exposure《修改方法 达到相同居住人暴露的通风空气流量》.pdf
《ASHRAE LO-09-086-2009 A Method for Modifying Ventilation Airflow Rates to Achieve Equivalent Occupant Exposure《修改方法 达到相同居住人暴露的通风空气流量》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE LO-09-086-2009 A Method for Modifying Ventilation Airflow Rates to Achieve Equivalent Occupant Exposure《修改方法 达到相同居住人暴露的通风空气流量》.pdf(17页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、2009 ASHRAE 897ABSTRACTA method for quantitatively comparing dissimilar venti-lation systems has been developed. A calibrated ventilation model was exercised over a range of parameters seen in new and existing housing in the United States. Varied parameters included climate, building enclosure air l
2、eakage, presence or absence of a central forced-air space conditioning system, ventilation system type, ventilation airflow rate, and contam-inant generation locations. A baseline exposure was estab-lished based on the ASHRAE Standard 62.2-2007 ventilation rate using a fully-ducted balanced ventilat
3、ion system as the reference system and a moderately airtight building enclosure (3.5 ach50). A ventilation airflow coefficient was then deter-mined for each ventilation system such that the occupant expo-sure using the subject ventilation system was equal to the occupant exposure using the reference
4、 system at the baseline ventilation rate. These coefficients can be used to compare the effectiveness of different ventilation systems. INTRODUCTIONASHRAE Standard 62.22007 Ventilation and Acceptable Indoor Air Quality in Low-Rise Residential Build-ings (ASHRAE 2008) (furthermore referred to in this
5、 paper simply as “Standard 62.2”) sets minimum required ventilation rates for residential dwelling units. The amount of air prescribed by the standard is determined by the size of the dwelling and the number of occupants, typically determined from the number of bedrooms. No further instruction is gi
6、ven as to what type of ventilation system is acceptable. This omis-sion may lead some users of the standard to believe that all ventilation systems that provide the same amount of air provide the same benefit. This is in fact not the case. Past work has shown that different residential ventilation s
7、ystems do not provide equivalent performance even when providing the same nominal outside air flow rate. For example, Hendron (2007) found that when interior doors were closed, an exhaust-only ventilation system provides less uniform distribution of ventilation air than a ventilation system that inc
8、orporates the central air handler to periodically mix the spaces. Sherman (2008) found that exposure levels calculated from tracer gas testing within a house depended strongly on the ventilation system and assumptions about the pollutant source and occupant location.The purpose of the work described
9、 in this paper is to address this particular weakness in Standard 62.2. It is an attempt to quantitatively compare many existing ventilation systems and provide a method for adjusting the Standard 62.2 ventilation rate for a house based on the type of ventilation system installed. This method result
10、s in a coefficient assigned to each ventilation system (CS) that modifies the current Stan-dard 62.2 mechanical ventilation rate. This would result in an equation of the form shown in Equation 1:(1)WhereQfan= required ventilation system flow rateCS= system coefficient (assigned based on the ventilat
11、ion system selected)Qvent= the minimum mechanical ventilation flow rate required by Standard 62.2.Townsend (2009) demonstrated that it was possible to replicate field measurements in a calibrated computer model to predict the performance of different ventilation systems QfanCSQvent=A Method for Modi
12、fying Ventilation Airflow Rates to Achieve Equivalent Occupant ExposureAaron Townsend, PE Armin Rudd Joseph Lstiburek, PhD, PEngAssociate Member ASHRAE Member ASHRAE Fellow ASHRAEAaron Townsend is an associate and Armin Rudd and Joseph Lstiburek are principals with Building Science Corporation, Some
13、rville, MA.LO-09-086 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 only. Additional reproduction, distribution, or transmission in either print or digital form is not p
14、ermitted without ASHRAEs prior written permission.898 ASHRAE Transactionsunder similar conditions; however this work was limited to a single, two-story house in one climate and was not directly applicable to the entire stock of existing and new residential homes in the United States. The range of cl
15、imates and house characteristics, especially the building enclosure air leakage rate, across the U.S. heavily influence the performance of ventilation systems.The work described in this paper addresses some of the limitations of the work in Townsend (2009) by exercising a similar computer model over
16、 a wide range of climates and building enclosure air leakage rates. By doing so, this work covers a much larger subset of typical single-family houses found in the United States. Next, by choosing a reference ventilation system for baseline performance, the ventilation systems considered in this wor
17、k are evaluated in the manner described above and their equivalency determined. The end goal is to show how this method works and assign example system coefficient to each of the several ventilation systems considered.DESCRIPTION OF COMPUTER MODELThis work follows previous work (Townsend 2009) in wh
18、ich CONTAM, a multi-zone airflow modeling program (Walton 2005, Dols 2001) was used in a calibrated model of one house to reproduce the results of field tests and then to predict the performance of ventilation systems that were not tested in the field. In the current work, the CONTAM model was used
19、in a similar fashion, except that instead of duplicating the results from one specific house, it was exer-cised over a range of parameters in order to cover a reason-able subset of the new and existing houses in the United States. This range of parameters and the input assumptions used came about th
20、rough consensus agreement working directly with ASHRAE Standing Standards Project Committee 62.2 members over the course of several meet-ings from 2006 to 2009. House CharacteristicsA single house plan was used in this study. The house modeled is a two-story, approximately 2600 sf (240 m2) house wit
21、h four bedrooms and three bathrooms. The first floor consists of one bedroom, one bathroom, a laundry/utility room, a living room, and a kitchen/dining room. The second floor consists of the master bedroom and master bathroom, two additional bedrooms, one additional bathroom, and a small area at the
22、 top of the stairway overlooking living room below. In the model, each room with a closeable door was modeled as a separate zone with the exception of closets, which were modeled as part of the room they were connected to. The kitchen was modeled as a separate zone from the living room even though t
23、here was no closeable door between the two. The arrangement of the zones in the house is shown in Figure 1 and the relevant zone attributes are listed in Table 1. The house has a garage and vented attic that were both neglected in the computer model; these spaces were modeled as outdoors.OccupancyTw
24、o occupants were assigned to the master bedroom and a single occupant was assigned to each of the remaining Figure 1 Zones in the modeled house.ASHRAE Transactions 899bedrooms, for a total of five occupants in the four-bedroom house. Each occupant was assumed to follow the same sched-ule each day, a
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