Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings

In this research, an existing building calibrated simulation model from 1981 was built based on measured energy and indoor temperature data. The model was used to study the central control's energy-saving potential. With parametric simulations, DHW circulation internal heat gain and ventilation...

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Main Authors: Hajian Hatef, Ahmed Kaiser, Kurnitski Jarek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_09002.pdf
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spelling doaj-7d9833b099e2428f82d1c76380ced2262021-04-06T13:49:55ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422021-01-012460900210.1051/e3sconf/202124609002e3sconf_hvac2021_09002Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildingsHajian Hatef0Ahmed KaiserKurnitski JarekAalto University, Department of Civil EngineeringIn this research, an existing building calibrated simulation model from 1981 was built based on measured energy and indoor temperature data. The model was used to study the central control's energy-saving potential. With parametric simulations, DHW circulation internal heat gain and ventilation airflow rate was determined as 85% and 0.29 l/s/m², respectively. DHW circulation heat loss has been found almost as high as DHW use. Dropping the heating curve from 70/40 °C to 65/35 °C resulted in a saving of 0.6 kWh/m²a (0.8% of space heating energy) on the cost of thermal comfort as yearly hours of the mean air temperature below 21 °C rose from 2.7% to 9.0%. It was necessary to reduce the heating curve to 55/25 °C in a hypothetical scenario with fully open thermostats, indicating heat redistribution from warmer to colder rooms, leading to higher heating energy. The findings indicate no energy saving potential due to compromising thermal comfort even by 5 °C heating curve reduction. It was revealed that the building average indoor temperature is not a factor to estimate energy-saving potential because of too low temperature in the coldest apartments.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_09002.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hajian Hatef
Ahmed Kaiser
Kurnitski Jarek
spellingShingle Hajian Hatef
Ahmed Kaiser
Kurnitski Jarek
Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Hajian Hatef
Ahmed Kaiser
Kurnitski Jarek
author_sort Hajian Hatef
title Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
title_short Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
title_full Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
title_fullStr Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
title_sort estimation of energy-saving potential and indoor thermal comfort by the central control of the heating curve in old apartment buildings
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In this research, an existing building calibrated simulation model from 1981 was built based on measured energy and indoor temperature data. The model was used to study the central control's energy-saving potential. With parametric simulations, DHW circulation internal heat gain and ventilation airflow rate was determined as 85% and 0.29 l/s/m², respectively. DHW circulation heat loss has been found almost as high as DHW use. Dropping the heating curve from 70/40 °C to 65/35 °C resulted in a saving of 0.6 kWh/m²a (0.8% of space heating energy) on the cost of thermal comfort as yearly hours of the mean air temperature below 21 °C rose from 2.7% to 9.0%. It was necessary to reduce the heating curve to 55/25 °C in a hypothetical scenario with fully open thermostats, indicating heat redistribution from warmer to colder rooms, leading to higher heating energy. The findings indicate no energy saving potential due to compromising thermal comfort even by 5 °C heating curve reduction. It was revealed that the building average indoor temperature is not a factor to estimate energy-saving potential because of too low temperature in the coldest apartments.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_09002.pdf
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AT ahmedkaiser estimationofenergysavingpotentialandindoorthermalcomfortbythecentralcontroloftheheatingcurveinoldapartmentbuildings
AT kurnitskijarek estimationofenergysavingpotentialandindoorthermalcomfortbythecentralcontroloftheheatingcurveinoldapartmentbuildings
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