Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms

New two-story wood-construction classrooms where added to an existing heavy-weight construction school building in the year 2006. The glass façade of some classrooms is south oriented. The building design meets the local thermal protection requirement of 2006, but the indoor temperature rises above...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pazold Matthias, Winkler Matthias, Antretter Florian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2020-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_03005.pdf
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spelling doaj-fb47d92f23344fbdaf357e181afdb8542021-04-02T10:51:46ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422020-01-011720300510.1051/e3sconf/202017203005e3sconf_nsb2020_03005Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classroomsPazold Matthias0Winkler Matthias1Antretter Florian2Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBPFraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBPFraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBPNew two-story wood-construction classrooms where added to an existing heavy-weight construction school building in the year 2006. The glass façade of some classrooms is south oriented. The building design meets the local thermal protection requirement of 2006, but the indoor temperature rises above thermal comfort conditions in the classrooms. As usual in Germany, no active cooling device is and shall be used. Measurements during holidays with close to none internal loads in addition to measurements during regular school occupancy documented the overheating. The measurement results were used to verify a baseline hygrothermal building simulation model that represents the status quo. Various passive measures with regards to construction, design and operation to improve the thermal comfort were assessed. Among them are ventilation strategies and solar protection foil on the glass façade. Furthermore, the already installed temporary sunscreen devices and mechanical night ventilation system coupled to mechanically openable skylights above the classroom doors and within the gravel covered flat roof were investigated with different operating strategies. This paper presents the required steps to improve the simulation model with the measured data in an iterative process. Measures to improve building performance, achieve thermal comfort, and protect overheating are identified.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_03005.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pazold Matthias
Winkler Matthias
Antretter Florian
spellingShingle Pazold Matthias
Winkler Matthias
Antretter Florian
Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Pazold Matthias
Winkler Matthias
Antretter Florian
author_sort Pazold Matthias
title Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
title_short Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
title_full Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
title_fullStr Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
title_full_unstemmed Investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
title_sort investigating overheating by measurement and simulation in classrooms
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2020-01-01
description New two-story wood-construction classrooms where added to an existing heavy-weight construction school building in the year 2006. The glass façade of some classrooms is south oriented. The building design meets the local thermal protection requirement of 2006, but the indoor temperature rises above thermal comfort conditions in the classrooms. As usual in Germany, no active cooling device is and shall be used. Measurements during holidays with close to none internal loads in addition to measurements during regular school occupancy documented the overheating. The measurement results were used to verify a baseline hygrothermal building simulation model that represents the status quo. Various passive measures with regards to construction, design and operation to improve the thermal comfort were assessed. Among them are ventilation strategies and solar protection foil on the glass façade. Furthermore, the already installed temporary sunscreen devices and mechanical night ventilation system coupled to mechanically openable skylights above the classroom doors and within the gravel covered flat roof were investigated with different operating strategies. This paper presents the required steps to improve the simulation model with the measured data in an iterative process. Measures to improve building performance, achieve thermal comfort, and protect overheating are identified.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_03005.pdf
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