ASHRAE NA-04-5-4-2004 Online Domestic Hot Water End-Use Database《网上生活热水最终用途数据库RP-1172号》.pdf
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1、NA-04-5-4 (RP-1172) Online Domestic Hot Water End-Use Database Dale K. Tiller, D.Phil. Gregor P. Henze, Ph.D., P.E. Member ASHRAE Xin Guo ABSTRACT Thegoal ofASHRAE Research Project II 72 has been the development of methods and tools to characterize total domes- tic hot water (DHW) consumption accord
2、ing to individual end use. An online web-enabled database entry and query system has been developed to provide worldwide access to project results. This paper describes the structure and function of this web-enabled database entry and query system. INTRODUCTION In the eleven years since its 1991 deb
3、ut, the World Wide Web has revolutionized the sharing and management of infor- mation. Booking an airline ticket, finding the telephone number of a friend in another city, and comparison shopping are all much easier today than they were a decade ago. Web- enabled database entry and query systems pro
4、vide the back- bone for these tools. This paper describes the structure and function of a web-enabled database entry and query system, developed under the auspices of ASHEUE Research Project 1 172, that provides statistical summaries of measured domes- tic hot water use. Two methods have been develo
5、ped to characterize DHW consumption, theflow trace signature analysis method and the temperature-based event inference method. The flow trace signature analysis method is well-documented (DeOreo et al. 1996; Fanney 1990; Hiller 1998, Lowenstein and Hiller 1996, 1998). This method allocates water flo
6、w to individual end uses based on the unique “flow trace signature” that occurs when hot water is drawn at different end uses (e.g., the duration and timing of measured flow will be different for dishwashers, clothes washers, faucets, and showers). Lowenstein and Hiller (1998) extended the flow trac
7、e signature analysis method by supplementing measured flow at the hot water tank with measurements of pipe temperature at strategically located branches in the hot water pipe network. This supplementary information helped better discriminate concurrent hot water draws, which were difficult to discri
8、minate using only flow trace signature. While additional temperature measurements at strategic locations in the pipe network helped to more accurately allo- cate water flow, Lowenstein and Hiller (1998) noted that temperature measurement points located at the hot water draw location itself would hav
9、e provided more specific localization of end use. The temperature-based event inference method (Henze et al. 2002) adopts this strategy, llocating hot water draws to specific end uses (e.g., dishwasher, clotheswasher, faucets, etc.) based on the change in pipe temperature that occurs at the end use
10、when hot water is drawn. Henze et al. (2002) attached a fast-responding temperature sensor to the pipe at each end use, measuring pipe temperature every second, while a flowmeter measures flow from the hot water tank. As hot water flows to specific end uses, the pipe temper- ature at respective end
11、uses where water is drawn will rise sharply. The change in pipe temperature provides an indirect measure of where in the pipe network hot water is being drawn. Two papers provide technical details on the analytical methods and software tools that have been developed to allo- cate domestic hot water
12、draws to specific end uses (Henze et al. 2002; Tiller et al. 2003). Henze et al. (2002) reported results from a month-long pilot study of a single residence that compared flow trace signature analysis and temperature-based event inference. Temperature-based event inference was able to correctly allo
13、cate 97.1% of the observed hot water draw events to different end uses, while flow trace signature analy- Dale K. Tiller and Gregor P. Henze are associate professors, and Xin Guo is a graduate student in the Architectural Engineering Department, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Omaha, Neb. 02004 ASHR
14、AE. 682 - sis was able to correctly allocate 90.6% of hot water draws to different end uses. Although the specific method used to allocate hot water draws to end use is incidental to the development of an online database, the ability of database queries to resolve and summa- rize usage trends for in
15、dividual end uses will depend on whether the data collection and analysis method can allocate hot water draws to specific end uses. The database described in this paper has been populated with DHW usage data collected using the temperature-based event inference method, but any data collection and an
16、alysis method can be used, as long as the summaries of each hot water use event follow the same structure as used in the main database table (described below). This paper describes the structure and function of the web-enabled database entry and query system that has been developed to provide access
17、 to results from project RP-1172 and serve as a repository for other DHW usage data. The paper will first outline the generic structure of web-enabled database systems. This will be followed by a description of the DHW usage data that populates the database, the rationale behind including these spec
18、ific data, and an overview of the analysis methods and approach that are used to produce these data. Finally, the paper concludes with a description ofthe functions and queries currently supported by the database. INTRODUCTION TO WEB-ENABLED DATABASE SYSTEMS Web-enabled database entry and query syst
19、ems provide the backbone that allows websites to provide and display dynamic content. Web browser software sends a request to a remote computer, then retrieves, interprets, and displays a relatively small file consisting of text and layout instructions encoded in “hypertext markup language” (otherwi
20、se known as HTML). None of the dynamic interactivity offered by web- enabled database entry and query systems is possible with plain-text HTML. Three additional software components are required to add dynamic database entry and query, as follows. embedded in HTML, the functions of which are to commu
21、ni- cate with the database itself). Database server software is also available for all current operating systems: different database server products support a wide range of functions and capa- bilities. Query Module The web and database servers do not generate the dynamic content that is displayed a
22、s a web page. Since HTML only specifies the layout and appearance of text and other elements in a .browser window, it has no direct method of communicating with the database server and contents. The query module is the link that supports communication and information exchange between the static HTML
23、 web pages and data contained in the database. The static HTML pages that send queries to the database contain additional embedded instructions that have been written to communicate with the database. Any computer software code that has been written to query a specific database can be called by the
24、embedded instructions, as long as the query results that are returned by this program meet the standards for correct display in the web browser. Although custom computer software can be written for database query and display, most websites that incorporate database functions rely on commercially ava
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