A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area

Natural ventilation is a simple and efficient method for nighttime passive cooling of buildings to improve residents’ comfort and reduce air conditioning. The effectiveness of ventilative cooling depends on the number and arrangement of the openings and local wind and temperature difference between...

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Main Author: Günter Gross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Borntraeger 2021-07-01
Series:Meteorologische Zeitschrift
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2021/1066
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spelling doaj-e30d233e7bba488f872946484d5816502021-07-08T06:20:56ZengBorntraegerMeteorologische Zeitschrift0941-29482021-07-0130322723610.1127/metz/2021/106696918A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban areaGünter GrossNatural ventilation is a simple and efficient method for nighttime passive cooling of buildings to improve residents’ comfort and reduce air conditioning. The effectiveness of ventilative cooling depends on the number and arrangement of the openings and local wind and temperature difference between indoor and outdoor. However, natural ventilation works only if cool air is available in the surrounding of a building and when this cool air finds a way to infiltrate indoors. In this paper, numerical models are used to simulate the penetration depths of cool air from the rural countryside into a residential area and to estimate the local cooling potential for an indoor environment of buildings. The results demonstrate that the country breeze is an important process to transport cool air during the night, but, due to the limitations in strength and depth, it is only efficient in the first 100–200 m of the outskirts. Based on numerical experiments for a standard room with two windows, an empirical relation was derived to estimate indoor cooling depending on local wind speed and local temperature difference. This relation was used to calculate individual nighttime room temperatures of all buildings in a residential area. It was found that indoor temperature follows the ambient temperature with a delay and cooling is only half as great as outside the building. In addition, the models are used to demonstrate the cooling effect of the country breeze by calculating for a decade the number of days in the summer months when nocturnal minimum room temperatures are below a given threshold.http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2021/1066numerical modelcountry breezenatural ventilationindoor temperature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Günter Gross
spellingShingle Günter Gross
A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
Meteorologische Zeitschrift
numerical model
country breeze
natural ventilation
indoor temperature
author_facet Günter Gross
author_sort Günter Gross
title A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
title_short A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
title_full A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
title_fullStr A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
title_full_unstemmed A numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
title_sort numerical study on the effects of natural ventilation on summer nighttime indoor temperatures in an urban area
publisher Borntraeger
series Meteorologische Zeitschrift
issn 0941-2948
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Natural ventilation is a simple and efficient method for nighttime passive cooling of buildings to improve residents’ comfort and reduce air conditioning. The effectiveness of ventilative cooling depends on the number and arrangement of the openings and local wind and temperature difference between indoor and outdoor. However, natural ventilation works only if cool air is available in the surrounding of a building and when this cool air finds a way to infiltrate indoors. In this paper, numerical models are used to simulate the penetration depths of cool air from the rural countryside into a residential area and to estimate the local cooling potential for an indoor environment of buildings. The results demonstrate that the country breeze is an important process to transport cool air during the night, but, due to the limitations in strength and depth, it is only efficient in the first 100–200 m of the outskirts. Based on numerical experiments for a standard room with two windows, an empirical relation was derived to estimate indoor cooling depending on local wind speed and local temperature difference. This relation was used to calculate individual nighttime room temperatures of all buildings in a residential area. It was found that indoor temperature follows the ambient temperature with a delay and cooling is only half as great as outside the building. In addition, the models are used to demonstrate the cooling effect of the country breeze by calculating for a decade the number of days in the summer months when nocturnal minimum room temperatures are below a given threshold.
topic numerical model
country breeze
natural ventilation
indoor temperature
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2021/1066
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