Identification of ventilation problems in an underground bus terminal in Korea

Numerical simulation (CFD code) was used to optimise the design of the ventilation system of a large underground bus terminal complex near Seoul (Korea). The analysis of air flow patterns and parameters such as NOx and CO concentrations (from diesel engines of 19 buses) allowed to suggest and study modifications of design (change in airflow rates and grilles locations). Changes improve indoor air quality as the mean residual life time of contaminated air decreases.

Influence of different pollutant sources on selection of ventilation system in rooms with cooled ceilings

This paper analyses through CFD simulation results the removal effectiveness in an office cooled by a chilled ceiling combined with either mixing or displacement ventilation. For passive pollutant sources, both systems provide similar air quality. For active pollutants and when a large volume of all fresh air is supplied, displacement ventilation has better performance.

A heat and mass transfer analysis of cross-flow air-to-air total heat exchangers made of moisture-permeable paper

This paper presents an analysis of air-to-air total heat exchangers (heat and mass transfer) built up using moisture permeable paper (but impermeable to air molecules). Performance of 6 such total heat exchangers made of different types of paper were tested, in order to know their air leakage ratio and their energy saving ratio. An analysis is presented about the effect of leakage on energy recovery efficiency.

A comparison of indoor humidity behaviors: all-air and chilled-ceiling with dessicant cooling

A building energy similation code (ACCURACY) was used to compare indoor humidity in an office room in a hot and humid climate (Hong Kong weather condiitons) equipped either with a conventional constant volume all air system or with a chilled ceiling and a dessicant cooling system. The chilled ceiling and dessicant cooling provide better indoor humidity environment most of the time. The paper gives indications on how to avoid condensation on ceiling panels.

Sensory detection of VOCs singly and in mixtures: odor and sensory irritation

To increase our understanding of the olfactory and trigeminal (i.e., sensory irritation) impact of chemical mixtures we have studied the binary mixture butyl acetate/toluene. First, we measured complete concentration-response (i.e., psychometric) functions for the odor, nasal pungency, and eye irritation detectability of the single chemicals. Second, we selected fixed detectability levels between chance (p=0.0) and perfect (p=1.0) detection (e.g., p=0.6).

Two distinct causal paths from indoor air problems to sickness absenteism

In a building with two parts, one with bad indoor air quality, workers have been moved around from one to another and absenteeism rate and causes have been monitored.

Do indoor environments in schools influence students performance ? A review of the literature

The study is a review of 600 articles to determine if indoor environments does influence student performance at school. The study has been extended to other categories (laboratories, offices). No direct relationship has been statistically shown but results suggest a link between ventilation rate and performance, as well as for presence of carpets, pollens or low efficiency filtration.

Worker performance and ventilation : analyses of time-series data for a group of call-center workers

The aim of a study is to determine if on site, in a call-centre of 4600 m2, a correlation can be found between ventilation rate and performance of worker. No clear effect of ventilation rate on worker performance has been found in this case on the air flowrate variation range (12 to 48 l/s). Yet some improvements of performance are shown at very high ventilation rate.

Impact of ventilation rate, ozone and limoene on perceived air quality in offices

Three offices ventilated with charcoal filtered outdoor air were investigated with different air change rates, ozone level and limonene, using the perception of a sensory panel. Results confirm that ventilation is necessary for ensuring good indoor quality even in low-polluting offices.

Odor intensity of a real room field evaluation and laboratory investigations

A simple method was used to assess odor intensity in indoor environments by a trained panel. Reliable results were obtained. Other factors, i.e., interaction with other senses, annoyance and other cognitive processes seemed to influence individual evaluation, especially during adaptation. Therefore, laboratory experiments could be useful to assess immediate odor intensity with minimum context influences. Comparison of odor sampled in Tedlar bags and in the living room were acceptable in terms of intensity but not in terms of recognition and description, indicating presence of biases.

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