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A WRITE-UP ON THE USE OF BIOCLIMATIC CHART. SUBMITTED BY GROUP 14 OGUNRUKU O.A (ARC/05/5626) OMATIGA D.J (ARC/05/5639) ADEYEMI I.S (ARC/05/5579) SUBMITTED TO PROF. OGUNSOTE. DEPT OF ARCHITECTURE. FEDERAL UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, AKURE IN PARTIAL FUFILMENT OF ARC 309. DATE. APRIL, 2008 BACKGROUND Building designers and owners are faced with the difficult problem of determining whether natural cooling techniques can be substituted for mechanical cooling in order to save energy. One solution, which would be particularly useful in the early stages of planning and design, is a manual procedure for quickly determining the potential of various cooling strategies in different climates. The procedure should be based on accepted criteria for occupant comfort and should indicate the success of possible cooling strategies in terms of the percentage of time that they are able to (or fail to) maintain human thermal comfort in the building. In developing this procedure, there were four principal technical problems to be solved: . Modifying the comfort zone boundaries on the building bioclimatic chart to reflect the most current comfort criteria and the special requirements of naturally cooled buildings. . Finding summarized climatic data for assessing the natural cooling potential for many climates worldwide, so that the designer need not obtain and process hourly weather data. . Extending and amplifying Watson and Labs’ method, from a graphic analysis of climatic potential, to a stepwise decision-making process for determining the cooling requirements of the building design. This process should be based on quantified design criteria. . Including a procedure for sizing windows to meet the ventilative cooling requirements determined in the climatic analysis. INTRODUCTION Before refrigeration technology first appeared, people kept cool using natural methods: breezes flowing through windows, water evaporating from springs and fountains as well as large amounts of stone and earth absorbing daytime heat. These ideas were developed over thousands of years as integral parts of building design. Today they are called "passive cooling." Ironically, passive cooling is considered an "alternative" to mechanical cooling that requires complicated refrigeration systems. By employing passive cooling techniques into modern buildings, you can eliminate mechanical cooling or at least reduce the size and cost of the equipment. Passive cooling is based on the interaction of the building and its surroundings. Before adopting a passive cooling strategy, you must be sure that it matches your local climate. There are four passive cooling strategies: natural ventilation, evaporative cooling, high thermal mass and high thermal mass with night ventilation. All these passive cooling strategies rely on daily changes in temperature and relative humidity. The passive cooling strategies that are appropriate for your building site can be identified by using a bioclimatic chart. This bioclimatic chart defines four passive cooling strategies based on temperature and relative humidity. This chart can be used to determine which passive cooling strategies are appropriate for the climate at the building site. First, the following local weather information for each of the months of the year is to be found; average maximum temperature average minimum temperature average maximum relative humidity average minimum relative humidity NOTE. Information on these kind of weather record are mostly kept by Local airports. On the bioclimatic chart, plot two points for each month. The first point is the minimum temperature and the maximum relative humidity (RH). The second point is the maximum temperature and the minimum RH. (Note that the highest temperature is paired with the lowest RH and vice versa.) Connect these points with a line. Plot a similar line for each month. Each line represents the change in temperature and RH over an average day. Passive cooling strategies are shown on this version of the bioclimatic chart as overlapping zones. When your lines cross zones, it indicates that this strategy may work for your climate. Some months may lend themselves to several different strategies. To reduce cost, you would probably choose one or two strategies that are compatible with each other and the building design. The design strategies suggested by this version of the bioclimatic chart are appropriate only for residences and other buildings with small internal heat gains. Internal gains for a residence are assumed to be 20,000 btu per day per person. These passive cooling concepts address getting rid of heat that accumulates in buildings. Of course, you'll also want to reduce heat gains in the first place with high insulation levels, heat blocking windows, proper solar orientation and good shading from building elements and vegetation. Passive Solar Cooling Passive solar heating can also be assessed using the bioclimatic chart. Passive solar heating is usually an appropriate strategy when the plotted lines fall anywhere below the comfort zone. More information about applying this chart to passive solar heating region is published in Sun, Wind and Light, which can be purchased for $45 plus shipping from Iris Communications, Inc. (800-346-0104). Passive Cooling Strategies Natural ventilation depends solely on air movement to cool occupants. Window openings on opposite sides of the building enhance cross ventilation driven by breezes. Since natural breezes can't be scheduled, designers often choose to enhance natural ventilation using tall spaces within buildings called stacks. With openings near the top of the stack, warm air can escape, while cooler air enters the building from openings near the ground. Ventilation requires the building to be open during the day to allow air flow. High thermal mass depends on the ability of materials in the building to absorb heat during the day. Each night the mass releases heat, making it ready to absorb heat again the next day. To be effective, thermal mass must be exposed to the living spaces. Residential buildings are considered to have average mass when the exposed mass area is equal to the floor area. So, for every square foot of floor area there is one square foot of exposed thermal mass. A slab floor would be an easy way to accomplish this in a design. High mass buildings would have up to three square feet of exposed mass for each square foot of floor area. Large masonry fireplaces and interior brick walls are two ways to incorporate high mass. |High thermal mass with night ventilation relies on the daily heat storage of thermal mass combined with night ventilation that cools the mass. The building must be closed during the day and opened at night to flush the heat away. Evaporative cooling lowers the indoor air temperature by evaporating water. In dry climates, this is commonly done directly in the space. But indirect methods, such as roof ponds, allow evaporative cooling to be used in more temperate climates too. Ventilation and evaporative cooling are often supplemented with mechanical means, such as fans. Even so, they use substantially less energy to maintain comfort compared to refrigeration systems. It is also possible to use these strategies in completely passive systems that require no additional machinery or energy to operate. This bioclimatic chart for the summer months in Medford, Oregon shows that high thermal mass and natural ventilation could provide adequate cooling. You can use local weather data to plot a chart for any building site. The table below shows data from four selected sites around the U.S. Max. Temp. Min. Temp. Max RH Min. RH Eugene, Ore. June 74 50 90 49 July 82 53 88 38 August 82 53 88 39 September 76 49 89 43 June 79 57 80 56 July 82 62 84 56 August 80 60 88 58 September 74 54 87 60 June 76 55 77 55 July 81 59 79 53 Akron, Ohio Burlington, Vt. August 78 58 83 57 September 69 49 86 61 June 80 49 70 31 July 87 53 68 26 August 86 52 71 28 September 77 45 77 61 Yakima, Wash. Conclusion The basic and most essential use of the bioclimatic chart in building design is to be able to provide passive cooling where the conventional techniques are not used. Passive refreshment is not and will not probably be in the close future, as efficient as the conventional techniques of cooling (electric and mechanical systems). However for persons in hot and uncomfortable climate for whom such an equipment of refreshment is out of reach, passive cooling design can be a step towards the comfort with low cost. References ASIAN JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING (BUILDING AND HOUSING) (Vol. 8, no. 4 (2007) pages 471-478) A METHOD FOR DESIGNING NATURALLY COOLED BUILDINGS USING BIO CLIMATE DATA (Edward A. Arens_ N. Watanabe†) SUN, WIND AND LIGHT, (G.Z. Brown)