* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Thermal Comfort
Solar water heating wikipedia , lookup
Heat exchanger wikipedia , lookup
Space Shuttle thermal protection system wikipedia , lookup
Dynamic insulation wikipedia , lookup
Cogeneration wikipedia , lookup
Insulated glazing wikipedia , lookup
Intercooler wikipedia , lookup
Heat equation wikipedia , lookup
Passive solar building design wikipedia , lookup
Thermoregulation wikipedia , lookup
Building insulation materials wikipedia , lookup
Underfloor heating wikipedia , lookup
Copper in heat exchangers wikipedia , lookup
Solar air conditioning wikipedia , lookup
Thermal conductivity wikipedia , lookup
Hyperthermia wikipedia , lookup
R-value (insulation) wikipedia , lookup
Thermal conduction wikipedia , lookup
THERMAL COMFORT THERMAL COMFORT Perception of temperature influenced by: • Season • Clothing • Humidity • Air Movement • Presence of heat given off by other bodies and equipment THERMAL COMFORT Body temperature regulated through: • Skin • Clothing • Buildings www.adinstruments.com THERMAL COMFORT Normal Body Temperature: • 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit • Few degree variation = distress www.fnal.gov THERMAL COMFORT • Between 1920 and 1970, a period of cheap energy costs, people developed a preference for year round temperatures in the range of 72 – 78 degrees Fahrenheit • Preferred comfortable temperature for most people is 65 – 76 degrees Fahrenheit in the winter THERMAL COMFORT Cold Sensitive Areas: • Upper Lip • Nose • Chin • Chest • Fingertips THERMAL COMFORT Thermal comfort is achieved when a stable, normal body temperature is achieved • The result of a balance between the body and its environment MAINTAINING THERMAL EQUILIBRIUM …when heat production equals heat loss THERMAL COMFORT Building Heating and Cooling Systems: • Used to control how much heat the human body gives off • Does not heat/cool the body but adjust the thermal characteristics of the indoor space to reduce the rate at which our bodies lose heat THERMAL COMFORT Gender Differences • Men feel warmer than women when first in a space, but later feel cooler than a woman would • Men take 1 – 2 hours to feel as warm/cool as a female in the same space THERMAL COMFORT Age Differences • Elderly and college age students are similar in the responses to thermal preferences and responses THERMAL COMFORT Comfort Conditions • Independent of the time of day or night • Individuals are consistent in their thermal preferences www.iqdrive.net THERMAL COMFORT ASHRAE Standard 55-1992: Thermal Environmental Conditions for Human Occupancy • Describes the combinations of indoor space conditions and personal factors that create comfort THERMAL COMFORT ASHRAE Standard 55-1992: Thermal Environmental Conditions for Human Occupancy Report indicates that our sense of being warm or cool enough is the result of interactions between: • Temperature • Thermal Radiation • Humidity • Air Speed • Personal Activity Level • Clothing THERMAL COMFORT Thermal Sensations – feelings of being: • Hot • Warm • Cool • Cold • Range of classifications in-between THERMAL COMFORT Indices/Indexes – Integrate environmental factors used to describe thermal comfort conditions • Dry-Bulb Temperatures • Wet-Bulb Temperatures • Operative Temperature THERMAL COMFORT Dry-Bulb Temperatures Wet-Bulb Temperatures • The ambient air temperature as measured by a standard thermometer • Estimate the effect of temperature, humidity, wind speed and radiation THERMAL COMFORT Operative Temperature • Uniform temperature of an imaginary enclosure in which the occupant would exchange the same heat by radiation and convection as in the actual environment THERMAL COMFORT Effective Temperature Scale • Correlated to Physiological Reactions, Comfort and Health Source: Bradshaw. The Building Environment. Wiley THERMAL COMFORT Guidelines for Room Air Temperatures Source: Bradshaw. The Building Environment. Wiley THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer • Heat always moves from the region of higher temperature to the region of lower temperature • Heat flows from an area of active molecular movement to an area of less movement www.keltechnologies.com THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer • Tendency to decrease the temperature and amount of activity in the area with the higher temperature, and increase the temperature and activity in the area with the lowest temperature • When there is no difference = Thermal Equilibrium THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Heat energy transferred by: 1.Radiation 2.Conduction 3.Convection beyondpenguins.ehe.osu.edu www.physics.smu.edu THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Heat energy transferred by: 1.Radiation 2.Conduction 3.Convection THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation •Occurs when heat flows in electromagnetic waves from hotter surfaces through any medium to detached colder surfaces THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation •Infrared electromagnetic waves emanate from an object and carry energy to all bodies within a direct line of sight of that object THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation •Electromagnetic waves excite the molecules in the objects they hit, increasing the internal energy, and raising the temperature THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: How building materials radiate heat •Reflectance •Absorptance •Emittance THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: How building materials radiate heat •Reflectance •Absorptance •Emittance Amount of incoming radiation that bounces off a material, leaving the temperature of the material unchanged White paint THERMAL COMFORT THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: How building materials radiate heat •Reflectance •Absorptance •Emittance Opposite of reflectance Allows thermal energy to enter, raising the temperature Stone THERMAL COMFORT THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: How building materials radiate heat •Reflectance •Absorptance •Emittance Ability of a material to radiate absorbed heat outward Black surfaces, stone THERMAL COMFORT THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: Mean Radiant Temperature •Air temperature alone does not adequately measure comfort in a space •Engineers use a calculation called the Mean Radiant Temperature (MRT) •Calculation takes into account heat emitted from surfaces etc THERMAL COMFORT THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: Operative Temperature •Physical measurement •Average of the air temperature of a space and the average of the various surface temperatures surrounding the space THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 1.Radiation: Mean Radiant Temperature and Operative Temperature are used by engineers to determine the amount of supplementary heating/cooling needed in a space THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 2.Conduction •Flow of heat through a solid material •Represents a small fraction of heat loss from our bodies THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer 3.Convection •Transfer of heat by means of a moving stream of a fluid (liquid or gas) rather than another object •Air movement, water THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Evaporation • Process that results from the three types of heat transfer • Incorporates both sensible and latent heat THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Evaporation: 1.Sensible Heat •Created by the motion of molecules 2.Latent Heat •Heat that is transferred when a material changes from a solid to a liquid, or liquid to a gas form THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Evaporation: Evaporative Cooling • Occurs when moisture evaporates and the sensible heat of the liquid is converted into the latent heat in the vapor • Air movement increases heat loss caused by evaporation THERMAL COMFORT muellerdesignlab.wordpress.com THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Air Temperature and Air Motion • Natural convection of air over the body dissipates body heat without added air movement • When temperatures rise – air movement must be increased to maintain thermal comfort THERMAL COMFORT Principles of Heat Transfer Air Temperature and Relative Humidity (RH) • Ratio of the amount of water vapor actually present in the air to the maximum amount that air could hold at the same time THERMAL COMFORT Ted Talk http://www.ted.com/talks/wolfgang_kessling_how_to_air_condition_outdoor_spaces.html