Modelling the human occupancy factor in the design of naturally ventilated buildings

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Title
Modelling the human occupancy factor in the design of naturally ventilated buildings

CoPED ID
94d2c378-a7ed-45f5-b3a1-d6334d801ddd

Status
Closed


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Dec. 18, 2008

End Date
July 17, 2010

Description

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During their daily lives, human beings constantly interact with their immediate environment. The environment affects human well-being, comfort, and performance. In turn, humans cause changes in temperature, air movement, relative humidity, odour and C02 concentration within the surrounding air.Naturally ventilated (NV) buildings are an energy efficient alternative to mechanical ventilation and air-conditioning. However, the energy consumption and the effectiveness of a natural ventilation system depends on occupant behaviour. On the other hand, occupant comfort in NV buildings can be compromised because the indoor environment is strongly linked with the outdoor weather conditions and vary throughout the space due to draughts, solar gains and warm air stratification.The aim of the project is to develop a validated simulation tool capable of predicting the human-environment interactions in NV buildings and so to predict the impact of building designs on occupants and vice versa. The research will combine a detailed computer model for predicting airflow and temperature patterns in buildings (computational fluid dynamics or CFD) with a detailed mathematical model of human physiology and thermal comfort. The heat and moisture exchange processes within the buoyant plume that surrounds the human body and the micro-climatic conditions within this plume will be modelled in detail. It is hoped that the work will establish important new knowledge which is essential for a better understanding of the impact of human beings on the design and the performance of NV buildings. The research will bring the human occupancy factor further into the core activities of the design process of buildings.The research will extend the prediction capability of CFD and reveal the complex human-environment interactions and phenomena affecting occupant comfort not only in NV buildings, but also in other areas of human activity and endeavour such as health (e.g. the transfer of infection agents, and indoor air quality), safety (e.g. firefighting), and in the design of cars, trains and aircraft.

Malcolm Cook PI_PER
Dusan Fiala COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Indoor air
  2. Ventilation
  3. Energy efficiency
  4. Air quality
  5. Moisture
  6. Energy consumption (energy technology)
  7. Interaction
  8. Air conditioning
  9. Computational fluid dynamics
  10. Temperature
  11. Buildings
  12. Thermal comfort
  13. Space weather

Extracted key phrases
  1. Human occupancy factor
  2. Human being
  3. Human activity
  4. Human physiology
  5. Detailed mathematical model
  6. Detailed computer model
  7. Building design
  8. Human body
  9. Complex human
  10. NV building
  11. Design process
  12. Occupant comfort
  13. Indoor air quality
  14. Environment interaction
  15. Indoor environment

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations