ASHRAE OR-16-C055-2016 Off-Normal Solar-Optical Performance of Pleated Drapery Simulation versus Measurement.pdf
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1、 Author Huang is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering at the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario Canada. Authors Collins and Wright are professors in the Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering at the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ont
2、ario Canada. Off-Normal Solar-Optical Performance of Pleated Drapery: Simulation versus Measurement Ned Huang Mike Collins, PhD John Wright, PhD Student Member ASHRAE Member ASHRAE Member ASHRAE ABSTRACT In recent years, significant advances have been made in modeling fenestration with shading attac
3、hments. Most shading devices have great potential for reducing both peak building cooling load and annual energy consumption through the control of solar gains, and the ability to quantify their impact is important. As part of an ASHRAE sponsored research project, several new models were developed f
4、or various types of shading devices. One of the most complex of these was the pleated drapery model. This model uses off-normal solar-optical fabric properties to predict the off-normal solar-optical properties of the pleated drapery. In doing so, the model assumes that the system could be represent
5、ed as a series of uniformly arranged rectangular pleats. The work presented here aims to validate model performance. A Broad-Area Illumination Integrating Sphere (BAI-IS) was used to perform solar transmittance measurements on pleated drape samples. The BAI-IS is capable of measuring optical propert
6、ies of thick and non-uniform samples. Five pleated drape samples composed of fabrics with different transmittance and reflectance were used in measurements. Results were compared to the model output for different incidence angles. Predicted transmittances were generally within 0.05 of measured value
7、s although there could be an overprediction as much as +0.11 for normal incidence test cases of high transmittance test samples. This discrepancy can be attributed to the geometric difference between the model and the test samples. INTRODUCTION Background Sustainability has become an important pursu
8、it. New buildings are being designed to have good insulation, allowing little heat transfer. Solar radiation is a natural and renewable source of light and heat for buildings. Window areas that are subject to high solar heat gain may cause overheating of a well-insulated building. As well, solar hea
9、t gain is usually the largest and most variable heat gain that affects cooling loads of a building. This is especially true given the current architectural trend toward highly glazed facades in commercial buildings. Indoor space conditioning of a building would be much simpler if window areas could
10、be replaced by walls. Yet windows create aesthetically pleasing spaces in any building design. The key is to find an acceptable and optimized balance among competing factors of building design (e.g., comfort, daylightlighting, energy conservation, indoor environmental quality, view, and etc.). One o
11、ption is to use a complex fenestration system (CFS), i.e., a window system that incorporates one or more shading elements. CFS has become essential in meeting multiple objectives of building design, including high building energy-efficiency and lower peak energy demand. CFS is conventional, economic
12、al and is commonly used to regulate sunlight and solar heat gain in high performance buildings. As energy efficiency requirements are increasingly demanding and indoor environmental quality remains a high priority, the ability to accurately predict window energy performance and quantify the impact o
13、f shading devices becomes more important than ever before. Ongoing Research and the Pleated Drape Model A generalized mutil-layer framework (Wright 2008) has been developed to predict center-glass energy performance indices of glazing systems with shading devices. The impact of a fenestration system
14、 on energy consumption can be calculated if the solar optical and thermal properties of individual layers in a CFS are known. Individual layer models for determining the solar optical and thermal properties of each layer in the window system have been developed through ASHRAE sponsored research proj
15、ects (Barnaby et al. 2009). Effort has also been made to implement shading layer models into building simulation software (e.g., Wright et al. 2011). Of particular interest is the pleated drape layer model developed by Farber et al. in 1963 and refined by Kotey et al. in 2009. Figure 1 Configuration
16、 of pleated drapery model showing solar angles (Kotey et al. 2009). When beam radiation is incident on a drapery, a fraction of it can be transmitted unobstructed through fabric openings (beam-beam transmission) with the rest being scattered forward (beam-diffuse transmission) and backward (beam-dif
17、fuse reflection) through multiple reflections whin the drapery layer. The pleated drape model (Koteys et al., 2009), which is geometrically represented as a series of uniformly arranged rectangular pleats (Figure 1), calculates the effective solar properties of pleated drape layer based on these bea
18、m and diffuse radiation components. The model uses angle-dependent properties of the flat fabric in conjunction with drapery geometry and solar angles to calculate the effective solar properties for both incident beam and diffuse radiation. Therefore, the off-normal solar-optical properties of a ple
19、ated drapery layer can be determined based on the off-normal solar-optical properties of flat fabric, folding ratio, and incident angle, . Koteys et al. (2009) provides a detailed formulation of this model. The present work aims to validate the pleated drape layer model. A Broad-Area Illumination In
20、tegrating Sphere (BAI-IS) was used to perform measurements on pleated drape samples. In this study, total solar transmittance, t, was measured. The BAI-IS is capable of measuring optical properties of thick and non-uniform samples. Pleated drape samples composed of fabrics with different transmittan
21、ce, t,f, and reflectance, t,f, are used in measurements. Finally, results are discussed and compared to the model output for different . EXPERIMENT TRANSMITTANCE OF A DRAPE LAYER Flat Fabric Measurements Using Commercial UV-Vis-NIR Spectrophotometer The pleated drape model relies on the solar optica
22、l properties of flat fabric as input. A commercially produced spectrophotometer, which is designed for photometric measurements in the 250-2500 nm range, was used to measure the required properties. The spectrophotometer is equipped with a 110 mm diameter integrating sphere. An integrating sphere is
23、 a hollow sphere with its inner surface coated with a layer of high reflectance material. An integrating sphere collects and integrates, spatially and directionally, all incoming radiation. Its inner surface is assumed to be Lambertian. An integrating sphere usually has at least one inlet port to ad
24、mit light and an exit port where detectors are located. One particular technical guide (Labsphere 2013) provides a good discussion on integrating sphere theory and applications. Construction of Drape Samples A drape sample frame has been built to support fabrics and for making pleats. The frame is d
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