Influence of model calibration and optimization techniques on the evaluation of thermal comfort and retrofit measures of a Lisbon household using building energy simulation

Author(s):  
Luís Azevedo ◽  
Ricardo Gomes ◽  
Carlos Silva
Author(s):  
Ricardo Gomes ◽  
Ana Ferreira ◽  
Luís Azevedo ◽  
Rui Costa Neto ◽  
Laura Aelenei ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 86 (5) ◽  
pp. 772-780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leen Peeters ◽  
Richard de Dear ◽  
Jan Hensen ◽  
William D’haeseleer

2018 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heinrich Manz ◽  
Daniel Micallef ◽  
Simon Paul Borg ◽  
Vincent Buhagiar

The present case study sets out to investigate the potential and limitations of passive building design in a typical Mediterranean climate. The Maltese Islands were taken as the case study location. Assuming a fully detached, cuboid-shaped, generic multi-storey office building, one representative storey was modelled by means of the building energy simulation code WUFI®Plus. Thermal comfort was analysed based on the adaptive acceptable operative room temperature concept of EN 15251 for buildings without mechanical cooling systems. Assuming neither artificial heating nor cooling, the free-running operative room temperature was evaluated. By means of a parametric study, the robustness of the concept was analysed and the impact of orientation, window to wall area ratio, glazing, shading, thermal insulation, nighttime ventilation and thermal mass on the achievable level of thermal comfort is shown and discussed. It is concluded that in a well-designed building and by means of decent insulation (present case: Uwall = 0.54 W/(m2 · K)), double glazing, variable external shading devices and passive cooling by nighttime ventilation, a high level of thermal comfort is achievable in this climate using only very minor amounts of energy for artificial heating and cooling or possibly even none at all.


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