Title: Blackstone Building 10A Progress Report March 13, 2006
1Blackstone Building 10A Progress ReportMarch 13,
2006
- Demi Ajayi
- Lauren Broughton
- Florence Evina-Ze
- Rotimi Okunade
- Alex Paddington
- Matt Smith
2Outline for Todays Update
- Site visit status
- Building envelope
- Experiment plan
- Sunload model refinements
- Heat balance calculation for 10A
- Heat balance calculation for Ops Center
- Dynamic heat transfer model
3Site Visits
- Visits to Blackstone MWF afternoons each week
with Cate - Each Blackstone team should send one member to
collect data and reposition HOBOs - Data collection using class laptop
- Serial-USB adapter
4Envelope
- Control Volume of Building 10A
- Basement 42,520 ft3
- 1st Floor 54,330 ft3
- 2nd Floor 54,330 ft3
- Total 151,180 ft3
- Square Footage 4,360 ft2 per floor
- Total 13,080 ft2
5Envelope
- Surface area of windows and brick walls on each
exposed side of the building
6Envelope
Sources www.coloradoenergy.org www.icynene.com
/InsulationSystem.aspx
7Experiment Plan
- Plan for HOBO placement based on the 4 HOBOs
currently available - We have requested 4 more
- Plan is easily scalable
- Ideally will be moved every MWF
- Will note outside conditions as well
8Experiment Plan
- Approach
- Take advantage of downtimes such as evenings,
weekends - Measurements must be independent of factors like
construction activities, propane heaters - Currently
- 4 hobos in 10A measuring stratification
9Experiment Plan
- Stratification
- Objective
- determine the vertical distribution of
temperature on a floor in 10A - Setup
- 4 hobos mounted at known heights on a pillar
- Take measurements over 1 day, 1 night
- Repeat for each floor, and at different locations
within floor - Purpose
- Empirical basis for stratification modeling
10Experiment Plan
1st Floor Example
4 HOBOs
Plans Omitted
11Experiment Plan
- Temperature mixing between buildings
- Objective
- Determine the manner in which heat is transferred
between the buildings - Setup
- Heater in bldg 10B attached to timer, watt meter
- 1 HOBOs in 10B, 2 at interface, 1 in 10A
- Modulate heater, take data overnight or over the
weekend - Repeat for each floor
- Purpose
- Empirical basis for modeling mixing between
buildings
12Experiment Plan
- Temperature mixing between buildings
Plans Omitted
13Experiment Plan
- Temperature mixing within 10A
- Objective
- Determine the manner in which heat is transferred
within 10A - Setup
- Heater in bldg 10A attached to timer, watt meter
- 4 hobos mounted in bldg 10A
- Modulate heater, take data overnight or over the
weekend - Repeat for each floor
- Purpose
- Empirical basis for modeling mixing within the
building
14Experiment Plan
- Temperature mixing within 10A
Plans Omitted
15Experiment Plan
- Others
- Repeat light intensity measurements on a sunny
day - Use IR thermometer to try and compute R-values
- Use thermocouples to try and compute R-values
- Concerns
- Use of a space heater overnight night at
Blackstone (fire risk?)
16Suggestion
- Post data from HOBOs on the ES 96 website
- List Excel and .txt version of each log
- Comment beside each log with
- Date of data collection
- Group (i.e. 7, 10A, 10B, MD)
- Location (zone number on Blackstone Plans)
17Sunload Model Refinements
- Objective obtain hourly variation in solar
radiation (Btu/hr/ft2) for each surface - North
- South
- East
- West
- Roof
- Purpose incorporate this data into a dynamic
model
18Sunload Model Refinements
- Three ways to get this data
- Collect it ourselves with an experiment
- Simulate the data using a model
- Use experimental data that someone else has
collected - What to do with the data once we have it
19Sunload model refinements
- First idea Collect data ourselves
- Record light levels at blackstone w/ Hobos
- Normalize by average sunload (NOAA website)
20Sunload model refinements
N
21Sunload model refinements
- Second idea Simulate data with a model
- http//www.builditsolar.com/Tools/RadOnCol/radonco
l.htm - Inputs
- Day of the month
- Elevation angle (90 for walls, 0 for roof)
- Azimuth angle (0 for N, 90 for E, )
- 1 square foot collector area
- Latitude 42.3 (Boston)
- Altitude 0 ft above sea level
- Output
- Solar insolation in Btu/hr/ft2 per hour
22Sunload model refinements
23Sunload model refinements
24Sunload model refinements
25Sunload model refinements
- Action Items
- Continue to verify the models predictions
- Take more light-intensity data at Blackstone
- Incorporate into dynamic model
26Heat Balance
- Back-of-the-envelope calculation
- Look at net heat transfer for a fixed inside temp
- Purpose
- Can the valance units in 10A provide a
comfortable internal environment during the worst
external conditions?
27Heat Balance
- Assumptions and simplifications
- Entire building treated as control volume
- Model as a large, air-filled box
- Conduction and convection through eastern,
western walls and roof only. - Operations Center omitted (for now)
28Heat Balance
- Some of the numbers used
- Toutside 0 F (winter), Toutside 100 F
(summer), - Tinside 70 F
- houtside 4.4 Btu/hr/ft2-F, hinside 0.8
Btu/hr/ft2-F - Rroof 60
- Rwalls 12.1 (recall previous slides)
- Rwindows 2.0 (double-pane www.coloragoenergy.org
) - 109 people in building, each generating 341.2
Btu/hr - 39 valance units in 10A
- Heating 10,000 Btu/hr/unit (19 are capable of
heating) - Cooling -5,300 Btu/hr/unit (all 39 are capable
of cooling)
29Heat Balance
- Results (winter)
- Valance units ON
- 330,000 Btu/hr net heat transfer into the
building - 125 F/hr rate of temperature increase
- Valance units OFF
- 140,000 Btu/hr net heat transfer into the
building - 53 F/hr rate of temperature increase
- Therefore even in the winter without heating,
people will want to open windows
30Heat Balance
- Results (summer)
- Valance units ON
- -9000 Btu/hr net heat transfer into the building
- -3 F/hr rate of temperature increase
- Valance units OFF
- 200,000 Btu/hr net heat transfer into the
building - 75 F/hr rate of temperature increase
31Heat Balance (Ops Center)
- Back-of-the-envelope calculation
- Look thermal load from equipment versus cooling
capacity of Ops Center HVAC (labeled AC-1 on
plans)
32Heat Balance (Ops Center)
Courtesy of www.apc.com
33Heat Balance (Ops Center)
- Thermal load from equipment
- Preliminary figures based on tour of chilled
water facilities in SC basement - Currently confirming quantity and type of
equipment with Ops Ctr manager - 18,000 Btu/hr (computers, monitors, racks, etc.)
- Cooling capacity of HVAC
- 148,400 Btu/hr (according to plans)
- Therefore surplus of cooling capacity
34Heat Balance (Ops Center)
- Additional modeling work for Ops Center
- Deduce interactions between ops center control
volume and rest of 2nd floor - Temperature stratification and spatial
distribution - Humidity
35Dynamic Heat Transfer Model
- Treat the building as one big air-filled box
(oversimplification at first) - Look at average temperature
- Incorporate same aspects as the steady-state
calculations above
36Dynamic Heat Transfer Model
- Governing equations
- where
37Dynamic Heat Transfer Model
- The Point
- Simulate cooling or heating cycle
- See which control algorithms yield the best
efficiency, comfort - Accomplished so far
- Extremely simple version implemented (single
temperature-dependent heat source) - Uses Euler method to solve the ODE
38Dynamic Heat Transfer Model
- To do (by next meeting)
- Incorporate additional heat sources (like the
heat balance Demi showed) - Improve ODE solver
- To do (by spring break)
- Incorporate humidity
- Add multiple control volumes