The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics

A 2D unsteady computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model is employed to simulate buoyancy-driven turbulent ventilation in attics with different pitch values and ceiling insulation levels under summer conditions. The impacts of roof pitch and ceiling insulation on the cooling load of gable-roof residen...

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Main Authors: Linxia Gu, Zhigang Shen, Shimin Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-07-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
CFD
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/5/7/2178
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spelling doaj-4d90818847524690932a6e938aa7fa142020-11-24T22:02:36ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732012-07-01572178219610.3390/en5072178The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated AtticsLinxia GuZhigang ShenShimin WangA 2D unsteady computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model is employed to simulate buoyancy-driven turbulent ventilation in attics with different pitch values and ceiling insulation levels under summer conditions. The impacts of roof pitch and ceiling insulation on the cooling load of gable-roof residential buildings are investigated based on the simulation of turbulent air flow and natural convection heat transfer in attic spaces with roof pitches from 3/12 to 18/12 combined with ceiling insulation levels from R-1.2 to R-40. The modeling results show that the air flows in the attics are steady and exhibit a general streamline pattern that is qualitatively insensitive to the investigated variations of roof pitch and ceiling insulation. Furthermore, it is predicted that the ceiling insulation plays a control role on the attic cooling load and that an increase of roof pitch from 3/12 to 8/12 results in a decrease in the cooling load by around 9% in the investigated cases. The results suggest that the increase of roof pitch alone, without changing other design parameters, has limited impact on attics cooling load and airflow pattern. The research results also suggest both the predicted ventilating mass flow rate and attic cooling load can be satisfactorily correlated by simple relationships in terms of appropriately defined Rayleigh and Nusselt numbers.http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/5/7/2178atticnatural ventilationroof pitchinsulationcoolingturbulenceCFD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linxia Gu
Zhigang Shen
Shimin Wang
spellingShingle Linxia Gu
Zhigang Shen
Shimin Wang
The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
Energies
attic
natural ventilation
roof pitch
insulation
cooling
turbulence
CFD
author_facet Linxia Gu
Zhigang Shen
Shimin Wang
author_sort Linxia Gu
title The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
title_short The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
title_full The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
title_fullStr The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Roof Pitch and Ceiling Insulation on Cooling Load of Naturally-Ventilated Attics
title_sort impact of roof pitch and ceiling insulation on cooling load of naturally-ventilated attics
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2012-07-01
description A 2D unsteady computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model is employed to simulate buoyancy-driven turbulent ventilation in attics with different pitch values and ceiling insulation levels under summer conditions. The impacts of roof pitch and ceiling insulation on the cooling load of gable-roof residential buildings are investigated based on the simulation of turbulent air flow and natural convection heat transfer in attic spaces with roof pitches from 3/12 to 18/12 combined with ceiling insulation levels from R-1.2 to R-40. The modeling results show that the air flows in the attics are steady and exhibit a general streamline pattern that is qualitatively insensitive to the investigated variations of roof pitch and ceiling insulation. Furthermore, it is predicted that the ceiling insulation plays a control role on the attic cooling load and that an increase of roof pitch from 3/12 to 8/12 results in a decrease in the cooling load by around 9% in the investigated cases. The results suggest that the increase of roof pitch alone, without changing other design parameters, has limited impact on attics cooling load and airflow pattern. The research results also suggest both the predicted ventilating mass flow rate and attic cooling load can be satisfactorily correlated by simple relationships in terms of appropriately defined Rayleigh and Nusselt numbers.
topic attic
natural ventilation
roof pitch
insulation
cooling
turbulence
CFD
url http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/5/7/2178
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