Abstract
There is worldwide plea to reduce carbon dioxide emission. In response to such a call, several governments in the East Asia recently required to adopt higher room temperatures in summer. To promote such an idea, the public need to be convinced that such practice would not sacrifice indoor environmental quality, especially thermal comfort of the occupants. To implement such a measure, suitable ventilation system(s) to work under the unconventional conditions should be identified.Stratum ventilation is introduced to demonstrate its feasibility in coping for the higher room temperatures. A case study, a typical office in Hong Kong under local thermal and boundary conditions, is used to illustrate the performance of this new ventilation mode. Experimental and computational results show that with properly designed supplied air velocity and volume, locations of supply and exhaust, the proposed system has the potential to maintain better thermal comfort with a smaller temperature difference between the head and foot level, lower energy consumption. and better indoor air quality (IAQ) in the breathing zone. Much further work is needed to determine if the benefits are significant.
| Original language | English |
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| Pages | 1210-1217 |
| Publication status | Published - 13 Jul 2008 |
| Event | Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Building Energy and Environment (COBEE 2008) - Dalian, China Duration: 13 Jul 2008 → 16 Jul 2008 |
Conference
| Conference | Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Building Energy and Environment (COBEE 2008) |
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| Place | China |
| City | Dalian |
| Period | 13/07/08 → 16/07/08 |