Chamber Studies for Indoor Air Quality Modeling and Monitoring

Author(s):  
Sumanth Chinthala ◽  
Sunil Gulia ◽  
Mukesh Khare
1982 ◽  
Vol 8 (1-6) ◽  
pp. 461-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Özkaynak ◽  
P.B. Ryan ◽  
G.A. Allen ◽  
W.A. Turner

2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Koen F. Tieskens ◽  
Chad W. Milando ◽  
Lindsay J. Underhill ◽  
Kimberly Vermeer ◽  
Jonathan I. Levy ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Pediatric asthma is currently the most prevalent chronic disease in the United States, with children in lower income families disproportionately affected. This increased health burden is partly due to lower-quality and insufficient maintenance of affordable housing. A movement towards ‘green’ retrofits that improve energy efficiency and increase ventilation in existing affordable housing offers an opportunity to provide cost-effective interventions that can address these health disparities. Methods We combine indoor air quality modeling with a previously developed discrete event model for pediatric asthma exacerbation to simulate the effects of different types of energy retrofits implemented at an affordable housing site in Boston, MA. Results Simulation results show that retrofits lead to overall better health outcomes and healthcare cost savings if reduced air exchange due to energy-saving air tightening is compensated by mechanical ventilation. Especially when exposed to indoor tobacco smoke and intensive gas-stove cooking such retrofit would lead to an average annual cost saving of over USD 200, while without mechanical ventilation the same children would have experienced an increase of almost USD 200/year in health care utilization cost. Conclusion The combination of indoor air quality modeling and discrete event modeling applied in this paper can allow for the inclusion of health impacts in cost-benefit analyses of proposed affordable housing energy retrofits.


Author(s):  
Preston McNall ◽  
George Walton ◽  
Samuel Silberstein ◽  
James Axley ◽  
Kunimichi Ishiguro ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 436 ◽  
pp. 480-487
Author(s):  
Georgiana Stegaru ◽  
Mihnea Moisescu ◽  
Ioan Stefan Sacala ◽  
Aurelian Mihai Stanescu

Service-orientation paradigm can sustain enterprise transformation providing a vast amount of flexibility by allowing organizations to develop complex, cross-organizational business solutions through Web Service compositions. In this paper we propose a layered quality modeling framework that evaluates interoperability and adaptability of service compositions. A case study on Indoor Air Quality Monitoring System is realized to demonstrate the applicability of the proposed framework.


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