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A Method to Assess the Suitability of a Climate for Natural Ventilation of Commercial Buildings

Published

Author(s)

Steven J. Emmerich, William S. Dols, James W. Axley

Abstract

Natural ventilation has the potential to reduce first costs and operating costs for some commercial buildings while maintaining ventilation rates consistent with acceptable indoor air quality. While a recent surge of interest in Europe has advanced natural ventilation technology, much work is needed before this potential can be realized in the U.S. This report reviews the application of natural ventilation in commercial buildings, the technology, its potential advantages and related issues that need to be addressed. One area identified as a key to the realization of the potential advantages of natural ventilation is the emergence of hybrid natural and mechanical system strategies. The report also addresses opportunities and issues specific to the application of natural ventilation to commercial buildings in California including analysis of climate suitability via a new ventilative cooling metric, consideration of ambient air quality, and discussion of relevant codes and standards. Finally, current design and analysis processes and tools are reviewed and a plan for the development of new design and analysis guidance and tools is described.
Citation
International Conference on Indoor Air Quality and Climate

Keywords

analysis, design, energy efficiency, indoor air quality, modeling, natural ventilation, ventilation

Citation

Emmerich, S. , Dols, W. and Axley, J. (2002), A Method to Assess the Suitability of a Climate for Natural Ventilation of Commercial Buildings, International Conference on Indoor Air Quality and Climate (Accessed December 15, 2024)

Issues

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Created July 1, 2002, Updated February 19, 2017