4.7 Article

Assessment of airflow and heat transfer around a thermal manikin in a premise served by DOAS and ceiling fans

Journal

BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 214, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2022.108902

Keywords

DOAS; Ceiling fan; Convective heat transfer; CFD; Thermal manikin; Field measurement

Funding

  1. Kajima Technical Research Institute Singapore
  2. Research Collaborative Agreement [NUS [2019-1782]

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This paper investigates the characteristics of airflow generated by ceiling fans and the convective heat transfer caused by the airflow distribution. The results show that standing and seated postures have similar convective heat transfer for the whole-body, but with different contributions of mean velocity and turbulence components. The convective heat transfer coefficient caused by the ceiling fan is lower for the lower body compared to horizontal flow.
Ceiling fan improves thermal comfort and reduces air-conditioning energy consumption in super low energy buildings operated at warmer room air temperature with increased air movement. This paper investigated the characteristics of airflow generated by the ceiling fans around a thermal manikin body, and the convective heat transfer caused by the airflow distribution through experiment and CFD for standing and seated postures. The standing and seated postures showed almost the same convective heat transfer for the whole-body, but the contribution of mean velocity and turbulence components were different. Turbulence intensity (median value and dispersion) of the seated posture was higher, and the dispersion range reaches between 20 and 84% despite the average velocity being relatively low compared to the standing posture when the fan speed exceeds 100 rpm. The convective heat transfer coefficient for the whole-body caused by the ceiling fan was 32-75% of the horizontal air flow cases of previous studies at inflow air speed under 1.1 m/s for both postures. On the other hand, under ceiling fan flow the heat transfer coefficient at the lower body of the manikin remains relatively low compared to horizontal flow even at increased fan speeds. This difference potentially leads to a different thermal sensation in corresponding body parts between the ceiling fan flow and the horizontal flow situations.

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