ASHRAE OR-05-4-2-2005 Methods for Calculating the Effective Solar-Optical Properties of a Venetian Blind Layer《软百叶帘层的有效太阳能光电性能的计算方法》.pdf
《ASHRAE OR-05-4-2-2005 Methods for Calculating the Effective Solar-Optical Properties of a Venetian Blind Layer《软百叶帘层的有效太阳能光电性能的计算方法》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE OR-05-4-2-2005 Methods for Calculating the Effective Solar-Optical Properties of a Venetian Blind Layer《软百叶帘层的有效太阳能光电性能的计算方法》.pdf(15页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、OR-05-4-2 Methods for Calculating the Effective Solar-Optical Properties of a Venetian Blind Layer Darryl S. Yahoda ABSTRACT mndow solar gain can strongly influence building energy consumption, peak loads, and comfort. Shading devices are routinely used to control solar gain. The use of venetian bli
2、nds is particularly common. There is a strong needfor models that can accurately simulate this type of device. As a Jirst step, previous research focused on the mechanisms of longwave radiant exchange. Methods were presented by which spatially averaged optical properties (referred to as “effective”
3、optical properties) can be calculated. An enclosure model was formu- lated to model the interaction of radiation with the slat surfaces. This optical model allows the venetian blind to be treated as aplanar, homogeneous “black-box”1uyer in aseries ofglazing layers and, coupled with the appropriate c
4、onvection model, can be incorporated within a standard one-dimen- sional center-glass heut transfer analysis. In conjunction with the longwave analysis, the current study deals with the mech- anisms of solar radiant exchange. Methods, based on geomet- ric considerations and fundamental radiation ana
5、lysis, are presentedfor determining the shading layers effective optical properties with respect to the beam component of incident solar radiation-at any angIe of incidence. Both specular and difuse rejection at the slat surfaces is included. Theperfor- mance of these efective properties is demonstr
6、ated and discussed in terms of expected results and compared with other models and experimental results found in the literature. INTRODUCTION One strategy for controlling solar heat gain through windows is the use of a slat-type shading device, in particular, a venetian blind, which can act as an ad
7、justable barrier to solar transmission. The selection of the correct shading system John L. Wright, PhD, PEng Member ASHRAE requires information on the optical characteristics of the shad- ing system as well as its influence on heat transfer. This selec- tion process is complicated by the myriad of
8、available shading products, often with variable geometries, and the inability of current evaluation and rating techniques, based on center- glass one-dimensional computer analysis, to accurately simu- late shading systems. The result is that expensive and time- consuming calorimetric testing is the
9、only alternative for assessing the thermal performance of shading systems. Typically, the analysis of the center-glass area of glazing systems takes advantage of the fact that there is no appreciable overlap between the band of solar wavelengths (0.3 to 3 pm) and the band of longer wavelengths (3 to
10、 50 pm) by which radiant transfer occurs. This absence of overlap between the solar and longwave spectra allows the analysis to be carried out in two steps. First, a solar-optical calculation determines how much solar radiation is absorbed at each layer and how much is transmitted to the indoor spac
11、e. Second, a heat trans- fer analysis is used to perform an energy balance at each layer in which the net heat transfer from a layer must equal the amount of absorbed solar radiation (e.g., Wright 1998). The simultaneous solution of the resulting set of energy balance equations yields the temperatur
12、e of each glazing layer as weil as the various values of heat flux and heat flux components at each location within the system. In order to expand the scope of center-glass simulation, the front and back surfaces of the shading layer are assigned spatially averaged optical properties, called “effect
13、ive” optical properties. The use of effective optical properties allows the shading layer to be treated as a homogeneous, planar layer that can be placed at any location within a glazing system (e.g., indoor side, between glazing layers). The entire glazing Darryl S. Yahoda is senior technology spec
14、ialist in the Market Knowledge Department, Union Gas Ltd., Toronto, Ontario, Canada. John L. Wright is head of the Advanced Glazing Systems Laboratory, associate professor and deputy chair in the Department of Mechanical Engi- neering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. 572 02005 ASH
15、RAE. system can be treated as an n-node array consisting ofn-3 glaz- ing layers, one shading layer, plus the indoor space (node 1) and outdoor environment (node n) as shown in Figure 1 where the shading layer is included as the ith node. A complete energy flow analysis requires the effective optical
16、 properties, both solar and longwave, of the shading layer. Methods for determining the longwave effective optical properties were dealt with in the first step ofthis study (Yahoda and Wright 2004). A number of models for solar radiation transport through venetian blinds exist in the literature. The
17、se models are briefly discussed in the following paragraphs. Rheault and Bilgen (1989) describe a heat transfer anal- ysis for an automated venetian blind window system where the blind is located between two glass panes. The model was used to simulate the thermal performance of the system to deter-
18、mine energy savings for summer and winter conditions. The solar radiation model considers a closed cavity that is bounded by the glass panes and two adjacent blind slats. The slat surfaces are divided in two, in proportions dependent on the incidence angle of the solar radiation. The assumption is m
19、ade that all slat surfaces can be characterized using a total (i.e., spectrally averaged) diffuse solar reflectivity. Longwave radi- ation exchange between surfaces is determined using a conventional irradiancehadiosity model (e.g., Incropera and deWitt 1996), each surface having a known emissivity.
20、 Parmelee and Aubele (1952) developed a solar transport model through slat-type shading as a research project for The American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers (ASHVE). The research describes equations for the determi- nation of the absorbing, reflecting, and transmitting charac- teristi
21、cs of slat-type shades for solar radiation (beam and diffuse). Each effective optical characteristic of the shade is dependent on the solar reflectance of the slat material, the profile angle, and the geometry of the slat assembly. The research is based on treating optical characteristics of the sla
22、t surfaces as either specular or diffuse. From the blind geometry, the fractions of the incident beam radiation that will undergo a given number of specular reflections are determined. The effective optical properties for the blind can be determined by considering the amount of beam radiation absorb
23、ed and reflected at each specular reflection. For slat surfaces whose optical characteristics are modeled as being perfectly difise, the slat that is directly illuminated by beam radiation can be split into illuminated and a shaded elements. The view factors between the openings, the two elements, a
24、nd the adjacent surface that is completely shaded from beam radiation can be computed. The effective optical properties for the blind can be determined by considering the beam radiation that is transmit- ted directly in addition to the transmission and reflection that occurs through the difise refle
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