4.7 Article

Experimental and numerical evaluation of wind-driven natural ventilation of a curved roof for various wind angles

Journal

BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 205, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2021.108275

Keywords

Semi-cylindrical curved roof; Natural ventilation; Experimental and numerical studies; Smoke flow visualization; Wind angle

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The study shows that the natural ventilation performance of semi-cylindrical curved roofs is significantly influenced by wind angle, with extreme ventilation occurring at specific angles and factors such as wind resistance and flow speed affecting ventilation efficiency. The height of the curved roof is crucial in enhancing internal recirculation flow, and the semi-cylindrical curved roof is found to enhance natural ventilation inside buildings comparable to wind-catchers, potentially at a lower cost in terms of structure.
The paper experimentally and numerically investigates the capability of the semi-cylindrical curved roofs in providing natural ventilation. Extensive measurements around a 1:17 scale model of a typical room with a semicylindrical roof have been conducted to determine the pressure and velocity field for gaining the discharge coefficients of apertures. Besides, smoke flow visualization and three-dimensional RANS simulations have been performed to correlate the ventilation characteristics, the induced volumetric airflow rate, and the flow trajectories. The prior studies were carried out on the domed roofs, but in the present study, the focus is on the semicylindrical curved roofs. It is found that the natural ventilation performance of the curved roof is profoundly sensitive to the wind angle (i.e. alpha) so that the extreme ventilation takes place at alpha = 0 degrees, while the alpha = 75 degrees - 90 degrees gives the lowest airflow rate. The dependence of the airflow rate on alpha is attributed to variation in the pressure difference between openings (known as the main driving force) caused by flow acceleration and flow separation. Further increase of alpha slightly ameliorates the airflow rate, although still not comparable with that of alpha = 0 degrees. Flow visualization results reveal that the height of the curved roof is a key factor in the enhancement of recirculation flow inside the building. Finally, a comparison discloses that the semi-cylindrical curved roof is prone to enhance the natural ventilation inside buildings as much as the wind-catchers, although presumably is cheaper in terms of the structural costs.

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