Pre processor for ventilation measurement analysis.

It is well known that the introduction of tracer gas techniques to ventilation studies has provided much useful information that used to be unattainable from conventional measuring techniques. Data acquisition systems (DASs) containing analog-to-digital (ND) converters are usually used to perform the key role which is reading and saving signals to storage in digital format. In the measuring process, there are a number of components in the measuring equipment which may produce system-based noise fluctuations to the final result.

Simulation of diffusers in scale model experiments of airflow distribution in ventilated rooms.

Scale model experiments make it possible to analyse design concepts of ventilation, especially air distribution in large enclosures. The airflow structure similarity is fulfilled when experiment is carried out according to the principles of the approximate scale modelling. Special attention should also be paid to proper simulation of boundary and initial conditions. In a real ventilated object, the air is supplied with standard diffusers equipped with deflecting vanes.

Finite element calculation of natural ventilation.

The intention of this paper is not to compare discretization schemes but to show some advantages of a stabilized finite element method for modelling natural ventilation. Based on the finite element theory we present a formulation of boundary conditions that can be used for most ventilation openings in buildings. Stationary as well as transient situations can be considered without modelling of the outdoor space. Mathematical background and implementation details are discussed. Results are presented for ventilation of a living room at typical outdoor conditions.

The effect of object positions on ventilation performance.

The effect of the change in object positions (i.e. office furniture) on the air quality in a room was studied using zonal purging flow rates. In relation to the zonal purging flow rate in a room, the transfer probability from the inlet to a certain zone can provide information on the amount of fresh air from the inlet to the zone. In this study, the probability obtained from Markov chain theory was used to analyze the ventilation performance.

The determination of air change rate in naturally ventilated cattle barns.

The keeping of animals in livestock buildings requires the ventilation of these buildings. On the one hand good climatic conditions for the animals in the livestock building have to be provided, on the other hand the emissions have to be kept at a low level. The airflow through the livestock building plays an important role for both opposing requirements. The targeted control of the climate in the livestock building and for the minimization of emissions calls for knowledge about airflow and emission streams.

Numerical modelling of three dimensional ventilation duct flow.

Presented in the paper is an efficient and accurate numerical method for simulation of ventilation duct flow. The mathematical method is based on the three-dimensional incompressible RANS equations with isotropic k-w near-wall turbulence closures, written in generalized curvilinear coordinates in strong conservation form. The numerical method presented here is used to calculate the turbulent flow through a bend of rectangular ventilation duct featuring pressure induced secondary motions and rotation effects on turbulence.

Validation tests for a passive tracer gas technique.

In the frame of a Swiss research project, a passive tracer gas technique for the determination of multizone air flow and contaminant transport in buildings was tested, based on previous work in several other countries. First emission characteristics of the three different sources (PMCP, PMCH and o-PDCH) and the adsorption characteristics of the passive samplers (standard Perkin-Elmer AD400 adsorption tubes) were established.

Numerical simulation of transient effects of window openings.

This work is centered on the transient analysis of natural ventilation provided by a single side opening when only indoor-outdoor temperature differences are present (no wind). Using both simplified "engineering" models and a CFD commercial code (2D), different cases have been examined by varying indoor-outdoor temperature difference, window size, and including or not a heating appliance in the room.

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