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Published byAleesha Lawson Modified over 9 years ago
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Ben Larson 1 November 2011 ben@ecotope.com 4056 9 th Avenue NE, Seattle, WA 98105 (206) 322-3753
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SEEM: Simple Energy and Enthalpy Model Used at the RTF and throughout the region to model energy use of residential buildings The simulation currently has an energy balance and air moisture balance which predicts the annual heating and cooling energy requirements of a building NEEA has funded development of an infiltration and ventilation module to SEEM 2
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Current SEEM uses a fixed value for the outside air infiltration to the house. Input in ACHn (natural air changes per hour) & is constant every hour of year Input value covers sources of outside air including infiltration and mechanical ventilation Duct leakage impacts are calculated separately Updated SEEM will calculate a different outside air infiltration amount for every hour of the year based on mass balance: stack effect, wind, unbalanced duct leakage, and mechanically induced air flows. New input will be CFM50Pa, the blower door test result of air leakage at 50 Pascals pressure difference The user may input a fan schedule and airflow to interact with natural effects, Additionally, internal gains can now be scheduled on an hourly basis (previously a user-set constant value) 3
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LBL (1980): Sherman and Grimsrud Approach currently used in ASHRAE Stds AIM-2 (1990): Walker and Wilson Fundamentals the same across all models Airflow through house described in set of non-linear equations Implementations diverge Computationally simple ▪ LBL and AIM-2 solve eqns with analytical approximations but with differing assumptions/implementations Computationally intensive ▪ Ecotope model solves eqns numerically leads to differing outcomes 4
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Building Parameters Climate: Seattle Stack height: 8.5’ CFM50: 1800 ▪ R: 0.5, X: 0 ▪ ¼ of leaks in floors, ▪ ¼ in ceilings, ▪ ½ in walls Flow exponent: 0.65 5 Hourly Infiltration Estimates for Stack and Wind Effects
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7 Sample calculations for a house with CFM50=2000, stack height=16 ft in a Seattle climate. Exhaust fan flow is continuous. Solid lines calculated combined infiltration and exhaust flows using full model Dashed lines combined infiltration and exhaust flows using Palmiter/Bond ½ rule.
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Houses with ventilation systems which operate on an hourly level can now be modeled Infiltration now more accurately modeled over the entire year More infiltration under strong heating and cooling conditions and less in the shoulder seasons Energy impacts of ventilation codes/stds, such as ASHRAE 62.2 can be modeled Interior installations of heat pump water heaters combining a ventilation and internal gains schedule can model both vented and unvented scenarios 8
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What do we mean when we say a house has 0.35ach? (effective annual average outside air changes) To get to 0.35ach, if the blower door test is 7ach50, the annual effective air change will also include mechanical sources Without mechanical sources, the natural infiltration implied by a 7ach50 test, gives 0.22-0.31 effective annual ach depending on building type and climate. ▪ “divide by ___” rule of thumb for converting BD test to ach natural New infiltration model allows (requires) us to understand (assign) separate sources of outside air: ▪ stack, wind, ducts, mechanical ventilation Potential implications for weatherization and sealing measures 9
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