Most (unlike Ned's floor) radiant heating pipes are imbedded in the floor, so the heat is conducted to the outer surface. Ned's pipes convect heat to air (to increase the convection rate he has added metal fins which one can clamp around the pipes) which then convects it to the underside of his floor surface (right?). Then the heat conducts through the wood floor to the outside surface.
HJ, e+ does not have a hanged radiant hydronic model. But there is a research project underway which will hopefully address this short-comming.
Essentially, you can use the embedded pipe model as a work around, but you have to live with the increased thermal innertia due to the limit on the thermal diffusivity. That means slow response times and running slightly more extreme water temperatures to achive the correct surface temp. Energy-wise, the dT of the water remains the same, allbeit more extream, so that impacts slightly on correct plant energy usage simulation.
I have experimented extensively with this model and can setup pretty accurate systems. I find autosizing slightly conservitive most times, but this depends largely on what pressure drops were thought of as good to use in the energyplus autosizing routine. Mostly, I do manual sizing, but I'm an engineer with experience in this area, which I don't even expect the others in my office have, let alone other energy modellers. My advise is to get a manufacturer to size these systems for you and then use those values for manual sizing.
As I said before (and as Ned also said), check your surface temps. This is the key to everything.
PS convection coeff calculated by e+ is as expected. For best results, use the ceiling diffuser model or the adaptive model. Mit freundlichen Grü�en- Sent from my iPhone (excuse the brevity)
i. A. Jean Marais b.i.g. bechtold Tel. +49 30 6706662-23
Yeah I am conerned this might be the problem especially you have a
carpet on the floor. We use ceiling radiant system and hang them
directly outside. That could be better but energyplus wont let you
set the radiant system on the outside surface and they have to be
inside one layer of construction. If i just use a layer with really
high conductivity, energyplus will give me a warning saying it
cannot handle it properly. It would be really helpful if I could
know how the sizing of radiant system work. The sizing:zone or
sizing:system or sizing:plant does not provide any information
regarding to the radiant system sizing parameters. I wonder this
might results in the undersizing?
HJ
On 6/26/2014 10:49 AM, 'Edward G. Lyon'
eglyon@xxxxxxx [EnergyPlus_Support] wrote:
Iâ??ll take a
quick shot in the dark based on my own experience this
winter with my home radiant system. The temperature
you are setting for radiant may be the fluid
temperature (I have used radiant surfaces in Energy+,
but not radiant floor heat systems). I expected my
system to work with a fluid temperature in the range
of 50C. Good thing I didnâ??t rip out my electric
baseboard, because I couldnâ??t keep the room warm. My
wood floor is too insulation even with Al heat plates
around my Pex pipe. I found I needed to run 80C fluid
to stay warm. With that temperature, my floor surface
was not much above 32C. I think you should check the
floor surface temperature that you have. If you are
not reaching mid 30â??s, you havenâ??t given the system
enough power.
Ned Lyon,
P.E. (MA, WV)
Staff
Consultant
SIMPSON
GUMPERTZ & HEGER
781.907.9000 main
781.907.9350 direct
617.285.2162 mobile
781.907.9009 fax
www.sgh.com
Thanks Jean. 17 C is VAV air temperature reset in
winter. In summer, we use 13C for cooling. In
winter, we dont want to heat the air too much
because there will be core zones that still need
cooling, so we use 17 C. Also, we dont want to
supply air temperature too high in winter because
radiant system will have direct radiation to
people and they will feel too hot if we supply air
temperature at 30 C. So basically, DOAS can only
provide cooling, and radiant will pick up the rest
of the cooling load in summer and all the heating
load in winter except the ventilation preheat to
17C from the VAV main heating coil.
I agree there will be a limit posed by the total
surface area of radiant system. But i tried with
E+ example file and they also have the same
problem. I wonder if they under predict the
convective heat transfer too much so the air
temperature wont go up in winter and down in
summer.
HJ
Biggest tip for radiant
systems is to control the surface
temperatures. If they are correct, and you
still get unmet loads, then you need an
additional surface area or auxillary
equipment in the zone like a fancoil. The
convective and radiative heat transfer is
ABSOLUTELY limited by the amount of area at
temperature in the active surface. Check
with hand calculations what W/m2 you can
expect and if it is enough to meet your
loads.
Why is your limit of 17
deg C imposed? If outdoors is warm and you
need heating inside, you could use warmer
air, no?
Mit
freundlichen Grü�en- Sent from my
iPhone (excuse the brevity)
Thanks Ery,
I used sized by ventilation because I
want to use DOAS to provide ventilation
only (at 13-17C all time) and use
radiant system to provide the rest of
heating and cooling. I also set the
priority in zone:equipment to let DOAS
meet the load first and then use radiant
to meet the rest of the load. However,
there are still tons of unmet load hours
and the energy also seems to be higher
than using VAV system alone. I also
tried with radiant system without DOAS,
so I only need to meet the building
load, but still I have tons of unmet
load hours. Do you have any sample files
that you could share with the group? I
would really appreciate if you could let
us know how you set the parameter. Seems
like there are other people having the
same problems too. Maybe I did
something wrong with the zone:sizing or
system:sizing tab?
Thanks,
HJ
HJ
You need to play with a number of
parameters in Sizing:System and
Controller:OutdoorAir objects for
your DOAS system.
If you size your DOAS on
"ventilation" then there will be
excess
heating and cooling that cannot be
met. You can see this in the HTML
report under unmet hours. But if you
changet the sizing to "sensible",
all of the excess heating and
cooling will be met by the DOAS.
You need to set the equipment
connection to set the priority on
heating and cooling of the zone
between the radiant and the DOAS.
If you have big DOAS coils as the
result of your autosize calculation,
you need to say "No" to 100% OA when
cooling and cooling. With this
setting, you will have DOAS most of
the time but when there is extra
heating and cooling beyond the
ventilation load, then the OA
fraction
will be reduced to meet the load.
Ery
On Tue, 24 Jun 2014, HJ wanghaojie630@xxxxxxxxx
[EnergyPlus_Support] wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I have some projects that has
radiant system with DOAS. I find
> EnergyPlus could not size this
type of system properly it never try
to
> meet the thermostat
temeprature. When I look at the
summer or winter
> design condition, the
temperature could go as high as 30
or as low as 7.
> I used openstudio to export to
EnergyPlus. For radiant system, it
does
> not use thermostat but use its
only temperature control, I wonder
if
> that could be the problem for
sizing? Does anyone have any
successful
> experience with this type of
system sizing and could share your
idf file?
>
> Many thanks,
>
> HJ
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