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Heat Loss

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Heat Loss & Gain Calculations * The major gains for a home are the shell, infiltration, duct gain, solar and people. Peak cooling loads are typically calculated in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heat Loss


1
Heat Loss Gain Calculations
2
How Heat Moves in Homes
  • Conduction is the transfer of heat through solid
    objects, such as the ceilings, walls, and floors
    of a home. Insulation (and multiple layers of
    glass in windows) reduces conduction losses. The
    direction of heat flow is from hot to cold, so
    this illustration shows conduction from a warm
    interior to a cooler outdoors.

3
Conduction Heat Loss
High Temperature
Low Temperature
4
Conduction Heat Loss
Low Temperature
High Temperature
As Temperature Differences Increase, Heat Loss
Increases
5
Conduction Heat Loss
Low Temperature
High Temperature
Resistance
6
Conduction Heat Loss
High Temperature
Low Temperature
As Resistance Increases, Heat Loss Decreases
7
Conduction Heat Loss
8
How Heat Moves in Homes
  • Convection is the flow of heat by currents of
    air. Air currents are caused by pressure
    differences, stirring fans, and air density
    changes as it heats and cools. As air becomes
    heated, it becomes less dense and rises as air
    cools, it becomes more dense and sinks.

9
Convective Heat Loss
10
Convective Heat Loss - Air Leakage
High Pressure
Low Pressure
11
Convective Heat Loss - Air Leakage
High Pressure
Low Pressure
As Pressure Differences Increase, Heat Loss
Increases
12
Convective Heat Loss - Air Leakage
High Pressure
Low Pressure
As Leakage Area Decreases, Heat Loss Decreases
13
What Causes Pressure? Natural
High Pressure
Low Pressure
Windward Side of House
14
What Causes Pressure? Natural
High Pressure
Low Pressure
Leeward Side of House
15
What Causes Pressure? Mechanical
High Pressure
Low Pressure
Tight Supply Duct
No Return Duct
16
What Causes Pressure? Mechanical
High Pressure
Low Pressure
Tight Supply Duct
Return Duct Leaks
17
What Causes Pressure? Mechanical
High Pressure
Low Pressure
Supply Duct Leaks
Tight Return Ducts
18
What Causes Pressure? Stack Effect
Higher Pressure
Hot Air Rises
Lower Pressure
19
What Causes Pressure? Stack Effect
Higher Pressure
Effected by Height and Temperature Gradient
Hot Air Rises
Lower Pressure
20
What Causes Pressure? Stack Effect
Higher Pressure
Hot Air Rises
Neutral Pressure Plane
Lower Pressure
21
How Heat Moves in Homes
  • Radiation is the movement of energy in waves from
    warm to cooler objects across empty spaces, such
    as radiant heat traveling from the inner panes of
    glass to outer panes in double-glazed windows in
    winter.

22
Equations - Conduction
  • q A ?T
  • R
  • where
  • q heat flow, Btu/hr
  • A area, ft2
  • R resistance, ft2-hr-F/Btu
  • ?T temperature differential, F
  • Higher temperature Lower temperature

23
Where Do You Get R?
  • Table of R-values for various materials
  • Some values are for entire thickness
  • Brick
  • Plywood
  • Gypsum Board
  • Some values are per inch of thickness
  • Wood (framing)
  • Insulation

24
How do R-values Add?
RT R1 R2 R3
R1 R2 R3
25
How do R-values Add? - Example
RT for a Structurally Insulated Panel (SIP)
½ inch
plywood 1.25 4 inch Rigid Foam Center 4
per inch 16.00
½ inch plywood 1.25

RT 18.50
26
Equations - Conduction
  • q U A ?T
  • where
  • q heat flow, Btu/hr
  • A area, ft2
  • U conductance, Btu/ft2-hr-F
  • ?T temperature differential, F

27
Equations - Conduction
  • Where does U come from?
  • Table values
  • How do they add?
  • 1 1 1
  • UT U1 U2
  • Commonly provided for the entire assembly

28
U-factor
  • A U-factor is used to describe an area that is
    composed of several materials.
  • Example
  • Window U-factor includes the glass, frame, and
    sash.

29
Relationship Between R and U
  • q U A ?T
  • q A ?T
  • R
  • U A ?T A ?T
  • R
  • U A ?T A ?T
  • R
  • U 1
  • R

30
Air Leakage - General Equation
  • q m Cp ?T
  • where
  • q heat flow, Btu/hr
  • m mass flow of air, lbs/hr
  • Cp specific heat of air, 0.24 Btu/lbs -F
  • ?T temperature differential, F

31
Air Leakage - General Equation
  • q m Cp ?T
  • where does m come from?
  • m mass flow of air, lbs/hr
  • Under normal conditions in a home
  • Density of Air 13.5 ft3 per lb air
  • Cubic Feet of Air m
  • 13.5

32
Air Leakage For Ducts
  • q 1.08 cfm ?T (ducts)
  • where
  • cfm duct leakage rate to the outside
  • where does the 1.08 come from?
  • cfm 0.24 60 min/hr cfm 1.08
  • 13.5 ft³/lb air

33
Air Leakage for an Entire House
  • q 0.018 ft³/hr ?T
  • where
  • ft³/hr air leakage rate for the entire house
  • Where does the 0.018 come from?
  • ft³/hr 0.24 ft³/hr 0.018
  • 13.5 ft³/lb air
  • ft3/hr ACHnat Volume (ft3)
  • where
  • ACHnat Natural Air Changes per hour
  • Volume volume of the conditioned space
  • q 0.018 ACHnat Volume (ft3) ?T

34
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation
  • Assume 10x10 wall A 100 ft2
  • Cavity Insulation R value 13
  • ?T 1 degree
  • q 100 1 7.69 Btuh
  • 13
  • What is missing?

35
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation
  • What about the wood framing?
  • 2x4 R-value 4.38 (1.25 per inch)

36
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation
  • Typical Wood Framing

37
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation
  • Minimum Wood Framing
  • Approximately 10 2x4s, 10 ft long
  • Each stud
  • 1.5 inches wide
  • 10 ft 12 inches/ft 120 inches long
  • 10 studs 1.5 in 120 in 1800 square inches
  • 1800 in2 / 144 in2 per ft2 12.5 ft2

38
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation w/Framing
  • Total Area 100 ft2 10x10 wall
  • Cavity Insulation R-value 13
  • Framing R 4.38
  • Framing Area 12.5 ft2
  • Cavity Insulation Area 100 12.5 87.5 ft2
  • ?T 1 degree

39
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation w/Framing
  • qinsulation 87.5 1 6.73 Btuh
  • 13
  • qframing 12.5 1 2.85 Btuh
  • 4.38
  • qtotal qinsulation qframing 6.73 2.85
    9.58 Btuh

40
Calculating R when q is Known
  • q A ?T
  • R
  • multiply both sides by R
  • R q R A ?T
  • R
  • R q A ?T

41
Calculating R when q is Known
  • R q A ?T
  • Divide both sides by q
  • R q A ?T
  • q q
  • R A ?T
  • q

42
R-Value of the Entire Wall w/Framing
  • qtotal 9.58 Btuh/F
  • R A ?T 100 1 10.44
  • q 9.58
  • TOTAL WALL R

43
R-Value of the Entire Wall w/Framing
  • Another Equation to Calculate Total Wall R
  • RT _______AT________
  • _A1_ _A2_
  • R1 R2

44
Simple Heat Flow, q, Calculation
  • What if there is a window in the wall?
  • Window
  • Size 3 ft x 5 ft 15 ft2
  • U-factor 0.40

45
Framing Window
46
Simple Heat Flow, q, CalculationWith Framing
Window
  • Windows Require Extra Framing Materials
  • 4 extra studs for kings and jacks
  • 2x12 36 inch long for the header
  • Approximately 7.8 ft2 of extra framing
  • Total framing 12.5 7.8 20.3 ft2

47
Simple Heat Flow, q, CalculationWith Framing
Window
  • Total Area 100 ft2 10x10 wall
  • Cavity Insulation R-value 13
  • Framing R-value 4.38
  • Framing Area 20.3 ft2
  • Window U-factor 0.40
  • Window Area 15 ft2
  • Cavity Insulation Area 100 20.3 - 15 64.7
    ft2
  • ?T 1 degree

48
Simple Heat Flow, q, CalculationWith Framing
Window
  • qinsulation 64.7 1 4.98 Btuh
  • 13
  • qframing 20.3 1 4.63 Btuh
  • 4.38
  • qwindow 0.40 15 1 6 Btuh
  • qtotal 4.98 4.63 6 15.61 Btuh

49
R-Value of the WallWith Framing Window
  • qtotal 15.61 Btuh/F
  • q A ?T
  • R
  • R A ?T 100 1 6.41
  • q 15.61

50
R-Value Comparison
  • Cavity Insulation Only
  • R 13
  • Cavity Insulation Framing
  • R 10.44
  • Cavity Insulation Framing Window
  • R 6.41

51
Your Turn
  • Total Area 1000 ft²
  • Ceiling
  • R 38
  • Pull Down Stairs
  • Area 15 ft²
  • R 2
  • What is the R value of the total ceiling?

52
Your Turn
  • Ceiling
  • q (1000 15) 25.92
  • 38
  • Pull Down Stairs
  • q 15 7.5
  • 2
  • Total q 25.92 7.5 33.42
  • R _1000_ 29.92
  • 33.42

53
HERS Rating Software Examples
  • Must know
  • Areas
  • R / U values
  • Temperature Differential
  • Indirectly by knowing what is on the other side
    of the surface

54
Above Grade Wall Properties
55
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56
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57
Conduction Heat Loss
Typical Resistances in a Wall
Cavity Insulation
Exterior Finish
Gypsum Board
Outside Air Film
Inside Air Film
High Temperature
Low Temperature
58
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59
Exterior Finish
60
R of Cavity Wall Section

Inside Air 0.68
5/8 Gypsum Board 0.56
3 ½ Cavity Insulation 13.00
Exterior Finish 0.94
Outside Air 0.17
Cavity Wall Section R 15.35
61
Conduction Heat Loss
Typical Resistances in a Wall
Framing
Exterior Finish
Gypsum Board
Outside Air Film
Inside Air Film
High Temperature
Low Temperature
62
R of Framing Wall Section

Inside Air 0.68
5/8 Gypsum Board 0.56
3 ½ Framing 4.37
Exterior Finish 0.94
Outside Air 0.17
Framing Wall Section R 6.72
63
Framing Factor
64
Framing Factor
65
Your Turn - Total Wall R
Cavity Wall Section R 15.35 Framing Wall
Section R 6.72 Framing Factor 0.23 (23 of
the wall is framing) Remember - the objective is
to calculate q correctly
66
Your Turn - Total Wall R
Assume the Total Wall Area 100 ft2 Framing Wall
Area 0.23 100 23 ft2 Cavity Wall Area 100
23 77 ft2 Framing q A ?T 23 1
3.42 Btuh R
6.72 Cavity q A ?T 77 1 5.02
Btuh R 15.35 Total
q 3.42 5.02 8.44 Btuh Total Wall R A
100 11.85 q 8.44
67
Your Turn - Total Wall R
Assume the Total Wall Area 100 ft2 Framing Wall
Area 0.23 100 23 ft2 Cavity Wall Area 100
23 77 ft2 Framing 23 Area but 3.42/8.44
41 of Flow
68
Total Wall U
Total Wall R 11.85 Total Wall U 1
1 0.0843 R
11.85
69
Total Wall U
70
Total UA for a House
  • 2006 IECC Compliance
  • (2006 IRC, Chapter 11, Energy Efficiency)
  • Prescriptive
  • Overall Building UA
  • Annual Energy Cost

71
REM/Rate Overall Building UA
72
REM/Rate Annual Energy Cost
73
HVAC Design Peak Loads
  • Heating
  • What is ?T?
  • Winter Design Temperature
  • Lexington 6F
  • Inside Temperature? Typical 68F
  • ?T 68 6 62F

74
HVAC Design Peak Loads
  • Heating
  • Losses (qs)
  • Shell (UA for House)
  • Infiltration (ACHnat)
  • Duct Loss (cfm)
  • Gains
  • ?? (People are not considered)

75
HVAC Design Peak Loads
  • Cooling
  • What is ?T?
  • Summer Design Temperature
  • Lexington 91F
  • Inside Temperature? Typical 76F
  • ?T 91 76 15F

76
HVAC Design Peak Loads
  • Cooling
  • Gains (qs) - Complex
  • Shell (UA for House)
  • Infiltration (ACHnat)
  • Adds Moisture
  • Duct Gain
  • Solar (Radiation - Windows)
  • People
  • Losses
  • ??

77
HVAC Design Peak Loads
Is ?T the same for all surfaces?
78
HVAC Design Peak Loads
Is ?T the same for all surfaces? Basement Walls
to the Ground Ceiling to the Attic Wall to the
Garage Floor to the Crawl Space
79
REM/Rate Peak Component Loads
0.57 ACHn 15 Duct Loss to Outside
80
HVAC Annual Loads
  • Heating
  • What is an annual ?T?
  • Heating Degree Days
  • 65F - Average daily temperature
  • Add them for one year
  • Lexington 4683 HDD
  • q U A ?T
  • ?T Heating Degree Days 24
  • Close but More Complex

81
HVAC Annual Loads
  • Cooling
  • What is an annual ?T?
  • Cooling Degree Days
  • Average daily temperature 65F
  • Add them for one year
  • Lexington 1175 CDD
  • More Complex Calculation
  • Solar Radiation
  • Dehumidification

82
REM/Rate Annual Component Loads
83
HVAC Annual Consumption
  • Heating Equipment Efficiency
  • Heat Pump
  • Heating Season Performance Factor (HSPF)
  • Btu/Watt-hr
  • Geothermal Heat Pump
  • Coefficient of Performance (COP)
  • Watt-hr output / Watt-hr input
  • Gas (Combustion)
  • Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency (AFUE)
  • Btu output / Btu input

84
HVAC Annual Consumption
  • Cooling Equipment Efficiency
  • Heat Pump / Air Conditioner
  • Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio (SEER)
  • Btuh/Watt
  • Geothermal Heat Pump
  • Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER)
  • Btuh/Watt

85
HVAC Annual Consumption
  • Equipment Efficiency Adjustment in REM/Rate
  • Formula Created by Florida Solar Center
  • Cooling
  • Reduced for Hotter Climates
  • Lexington Label SEER 13, Reduced SEER 12.2
  • Heating Heat Pump
  • Reduced for Cooler Climates
  • Lexington Label HSPF 7.7, Reduced HSPF 5.7

86
REM/Rate Annual Component Consumption
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