[bldg-sim] Insect screens on restricting flow

Gaurav Mehta gmehta75 at gmail.com
Mon Feb 13 18:17:11 PST 2006


Insect screens on restricting flowIan,

Search the database at Air Infiltration and Ventilation Center website (aivc.org). You might find something.


Best regards,

Gaurav Mehta



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ian Doebber 
  To: bldg-sim at gard.com 
  Sent: Friday, February 10, 2006 12:15
  Subject: [bldg-sim] Insect screens on restricting flow


  Does anyone know of any research or published papers on ventilated facades for extreme climates (~100°F for several months in the summer and around freezing for several winter months).  I am interested in the application of a ventilated facade in Sacramento California.  To add on that, does anyone know of a ventilated facade building currently constructed in Sacramento.

  Thanks
  Ian Doebber
  Graduate Mechanical Engineer
  Arup
  901 Market Street Suite 260 San Francisco CA 94103
  tel: 415-946-0292
  fax: 415-957-9096
  cell: 415-613-4314
  ian.doebber at arup.com
  www.arup.com




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: bldg-sim at gard.com [mailto:bldg-sim at gard.com] On Behalf Of Gaurav Mehta
  Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2006 5:53 AM
  To: bldg-sim at gard.com
  Subject: [bldg-sim] Insect screens on restricting flow


  Ian,

   



  You raised a very good point. Here are some of the things that I would like to share and I would appreciate some input myself:

   

  1.    You wrote:

   

  [I'm concerned about insect screens affecting the buoyancy driven airflow for a double skin façade.]

   

  Dr. Karl Gertis (director of the Fraunhofer Institute of Building Physics in Stuttgart, Germany) provides a critical review of double-skin façades in one of his article and cites some problems in the literature regarding research related to Glass Double Facade e.g. "window insect screens cannot be used with natural ventilation because the airflow is too weak to overcome the pressure loss over the air filter."

   

  For more information about the article please go to the following link:

   

  http://gaia.lbl.gov/hpbf/perfor_c.htm

   

   

  2.    You wrote:

   

  [I was wondering if anyone new of some papers that have covered the airflow properties of insect screens or can give me some information off hand.]

   

   

              Jun Tanimoto, Jun and Kimura, Ken-ichi (1997), Simulation study on an air flow window system with an integrated roll screen, Energy and Buildings             26(3): 317-325.

   



  There are a few sources that also deal with the effect of insect screen on airflow but they are specific to wind driven natural ventilation. 

   

              Swami, M.V. and Chandra, S. (1988), Correlations for pressure distribution on buildings and calculation of natural ventilation airflow, ASHRAE Transactions, Vol. 94, Part 1, pp 243-266.

   

  This paper provides a procedure for determining ventilation rates based on the Vickery algorithm (1983), however, assumption inherent in this procedure is that there is no stack effect.

    

              Givoni, B. (1981), Man, Climate and Architecture, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.

              

  On pp 304 Section 15.8 Givoni discusses the effect of fly-screens on ventilation. He quotes van Straaten, the decrease in total airflow, caused by a 16 mesh, 30 gauge wire screen is about 60% and 50% when the wind speeds are respectively 1.5 and 2 mph and only about 25% when the wind speed is 10 mph.

   

  Straateen, J. F. van, (1967), Thermal performance of buildings, Elsevier Publishing Co Ltd

   

   

  3.    You wrote:



  [I'm also wondering how to incorporate their effects on the flow by use of discharge coefficients and pressure loss coefficients.]

   

  Andersen, Karl T. (1995), Theoretical considerations on natural ventilation by thermal buoyancy, ASHRAE Trans. 1995, Vol.101, Part 2, Paper number SD-95-14-1, 1103-1117

   

  For abstract please visit the following link:

  http://resourcecenter.ashrae.org/store/ashrae/newstore.cgi?itemid=17248&view=item&categoryid=452&categoryparent=452&page=1&loginid=1357156

   

  In the section 'coefficients of interest' the author discusses velocity, contraction, discharge, and resistance coefficients and may provide insight into the effect of insect screen on airflow, however, the author does not directly relate it to the insect screen.



  There is a gap in the computation of natural ventilation research especially in terms of discharge coefficients and pressure loss coefficients as Ansyley (1999) and Linden (1999) point out that the computation of natural ventilation lacks experimental data and borrows the discharge coefficient and flow resistance of openings derived from data traditionally used for fluid flow in pipes and resistance values traditionally used in computation of mine ventilation.  

   

  Ansyley R. (1999), Unresolved Issues in Natural Ventilation for Thermal Comfort, HybVent Forum'99

   

  Linden, P.F, (1999), Fluid Mechanics of Natural Ventilation, Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 1999. 31:201-38

   

   

   

   

  Best regards,

   

  Gaurav Mehta

   

   

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Ian Doebber 
    To: bldg-sim at gard.com 
    Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 15:28
    Subject: [bldg-sim] Insect screens on restricting flow


    I'm concerned about insect screens affecting the buoyancy driven airflow for a double skin façade.  I was wondering if anyone new of some papers that have covered the airflow properties of insect screens or can give me some information off hand.  I'm also wondering how to incorporate their effects on the flow by use of discharge coefficients and pressure loss coefficients. 



    Thanks 

    Ian Doebber 
    Graduate Mechanical Engineer 
    Arup 
    901 Market Street Suite 260 San Francisco CA 94103 
    tel: 415-946-0292 
    fax: 415-957-9096 
    cell: 415-613-4314 
    ian.doebber at arup.com 
    www.arup.com 

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