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Designing for thermal comfort near a glazed exterior wall

journal contribution
posted on 2012-08-01, 00:00 authored by Timothy Anderson, Mark LutherMark Luther
In many highly glazed buildings, the thermal comfort of the occupants will tend to be related to the incoming solar energy and the heat transfer behaviour of the glazing. In this study, several glazing systems were designed using the software tools VISION 3 (University of Waterloo 1992) and WINDOW-6 (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 2011), with a view to improving thermal environment of occupants near the glazed wall of a commercial office. The systems were fabricated and experimentally tested to validate the software modelling results. Subsequently, the glazing systems were retro-fitted to the office and tested in situ for a summer month. Results of this testing, in the form of Fangers’ predicted mean vote (PMV) and the predicted percentage dissatisfied (PPD), are presented, and some options for improving the thermal environment in this near-façade zone are discussed.

History

Journal

Architectural science review

Volume

55

Issue

3

Pagination

186 - 195

Publisher

Earthscan

Location

London, England

ISSN

0003-8628

eISSN

1758-9622

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Taylor & Francis

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