Simulation on Building Energy Consumption for a Residential Building

A two floor residential building in Tianjin as the research object was studied in this paper. The software eQUEST was carried out to simulate residential buildings energy consumption, and to explore the annual total energy consumption of the residential building, which was influenced by air conditio...

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Published inApplied Mechanics and Materials Vol. 492; no. Power and Energy Systems III; pp. 143 - 146
Main Authors Zuo, Zhen Jun, Liu, Ze Qin, Li, Lin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Zurich Trans Tech Publications Ltd 01.01.2014
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Summary:A two floor residential building in Tianjin as the research object was studied in this paper. The software eQUEST was carried out to simulate residential buildings energy consumption, and to explore the annual total energy consumption of the residential building, which was influenced by air conditioning heating modes and the building orientations. The air conditioning and heating system modes used to simulate including the heat pump air conditioning, air conditioner & heat sink and radiant heating & heat sink. The simulated building orientations include east, west, south and north. The transformation of the sunshade direction could be obtained by changing the building orientation. The indoor design temperature in summer was set at 26°C, while winter design temperature was set at 18°C. As the result of the energy consumption simulation study showed that, the annual total energy consumption achieved the minimum when heat pump type air conditioning heating system was adopted. When the effected factors such as air conditioning heating system, indoor heat source condition, window size and some other factors which influenced energy consumption were constant, the simulation results might be found that the building orientation had a small influence on the building energy consumption.
Bibliography:Selected, peer reviewed papers from the 2013 3rd International Conference on Power and Energy Systems (ICPES 2013), November 23-24, 2013, Bangkok, Thailand
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISBN:3037859911
9783037859919
ISSN:1660-9336
1662-7482
1662-7482
DOI:10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMM.492.143