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Prediction of Room Air Diffusion for Reduced Diffuser Flow RatesGangisetti, Kavita 2010 December 1900 (has links)
With the ever-increasing availability of high performance computing facilities, numerical simulation through Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is increasingly used to predict the room air distribution. CFD is becoming an important design and analytical tool for investigating ventilation inside the system and thus to increase thermal comfort and improve indoor air quality.
The room air supply diffuser flow rates can be reduced for less loading with the help of a variable air volume unit. The reduction in supply flow rate reduces the energy consumption for the unoccupied and reduced load conditions. The present research is to study the comfort consequences for reduced diffuser flow rates and loading and to identify the hot and cold spots inside a room.
A small office room with ceiling based room air distribution method is considered for CFD analysis. The CFD results are validated with experimental measured data for the designed diffuser flow rate. A parametric study on different turbulence models, namely, low Reynolds number modification of standard k-epsilon model, re-normalization group k-epsilon model, transition k-kl-w model and Reynolds stress model is carried out, and simulation results in terms of velocity and temperature profiles are compared against the measured data. Other important parameters such as diffuser jet inlet angle and radiation effect are also considered on the benchmark case to validate the results and to recommend the best fit parameters for room air simulations.
Analysis has been carried out for a range of flow rates and heat loads. The jet momentum, draft and temperature distribution inside the room are studied for the impact of reduced flow rates and loading.
The thermal comfort is quantified in terms of vertical temperature distribution and percentage dissatisfied index.
From the research it is found that, for the studied room setup and air distribution method, the diffuser flow rate can be reduced up to 30 percent of the design flow rate, without experiencing a considerable effect on the room air temperature distribution. Also, based on thermal comfort and room air temperature distribution, several recommendations for occupant spacing in a room are suggested for reduced diffuser flow rates.
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