posted on 2009-09-03, 12:51authored byPaul C. Cropper, Tong Yang, Malcolm J. Cook, Dusan Fiala, Rehan Yousaf
This paper describes the methods developed to
couple a commercial CFD program with a multisegmented
model of human thermal comfort and
physiology.
A CFD model is able to predict detailed temperatures
and velocities of airflow around a human body,
whilst a thermal comfort model is able to predict the
response of a human to the environment surrounding
it. By coupling the two models and exchanging
information about the heat exchange at the body
surface the coupled system can potentially predict the
response of a human body to detailed local
environmental conditions.
This paper presents a method of exchanging data,
using shared files, to provide a means of dynamically
exchanging simulation data with the IESD-Fiala
model during the CFD solution process. Additional
code is used to set boundary conditions for the CFD
simulation at the body surface as determined by the
IESD-Fiala model and to return information about
local environmental conditions adjacent to the body
surface as determined by the CFD simulation.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
CROPPER, P.C. ... et al, 2009. Simulating the effect of complex indoor environmental conditions on human thermal comfort. IN: Proceedings of the Eleventh International IBPSA Conference, (Building Simulation 2009), 27-30 July, Glasgow, Scotland, pp. 1367-1373.
This is a conference paper, it was presented at the 11th International Building Performance Simulation Association Conference (Building Simulation 2009), details are available at; http://www.bs2009.org.uk/