4.2 Article

Exploring the adequacy of mechanical ventilation for acceptable indoor air quality in office buildings

Journal

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FOR THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 275-288

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/23744731.2021.1977588

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Cisco Canada
  3. Sensible Building Science

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This study investigates the effective construction of VAV AHU configurations to supply outdoor air to building spaces through data analysis and building performance simulation. Results show that occupancy-based VAV control minimizes instances of under-ventilation and improves outdoor air distribution efficiency, while reducing energy consumption.
This paper explores how effectively building variable air volume air handling unit (VAV AHU) configurations supply required outdoor air to building spaces using data analysis and building performance simulation. One year's worth of zone-level occupancy data from a floor of an institutional office building was estimated using Wi-Fi device count and concurrent motion detector and CO2 sensor data. Zone-level ventilation rates were compared to these data to calculate per person ventilation rates. The results indicated that some spaces experienced under-ventilation for up to 34% of occupied hours. For the simulation-based investigation, a 27-zone energy model was used. Occupancy data from the building were used in the simulation. Four operation modes were simulated: default operation, occupancy-based demand-controlled ventilation (DCV), occupancy-based VAV control, and a combination of the latter strategies. The fewest instances of under-ventilation occurred with occupancy-based VAV control. The under-ventilation instances were a result of inefficient distribution of outdoor air across building zones. The supply of standard (10 L/s per person) ventilation with occupancy-based VAV control, instead of a default constant minimum ventilation rate, reduced the number of under-ventilation instances by similar to 80% while reducing the energy use by similar to 30%.

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