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International Journal of Energy Research, Vol.31, No.8, 743-759, 2007
Chilled ceiling and displacement ventilation system for energy savings: A case study
This paper studies the design and performance of cooled ceiling and displacement ventilation (CC/DV) systems application for buildings in Beirut for the purpose of saving energy. The transient thermal response of spaces cooled by the combined CC/DV system is needed for performance assessment. For that reason, the plume-multi-layer model of CC/DV cooled spaces is extended to transient applications. A design procedure for the combined CC/DV system in Beirut humid climate and buildings is developed to insure that both indoor air quality and comfort are satisfied within the conditioned zone. The contribution of the proposed procedure is that it guarantees that the stratification height (occupied zone) is at 1.1 m taking into consideration the plumes from internal sources and non-isothermal walls. The design procedure is applied to a case study in Beirut to design a system for a typical office space at 85 W m(-2) sensible cooling load. The CC/DV system size is compared with the size of a conventional mixed convection system. It is found that the size of the CC/DV system is 10.2 kW compared to conventional system size of 7.9 and 13.4 kW at the 30 and 100% fresh air supply, respectively. For the same indoor air quality and thermal comfort level, the CC/DV system consumed 21% less cooling energy than the conventional 100% fresh air system over the cooling season. The initial cost of the CC/DV system is higher, but the pay back period based on transient operation is less than 5 yr. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:displacement ventilation;chilled ceiling;stratification height;vertical temperature gradient