Impact of Internal Heat Gains on Building's Energy Performance

Internal heat gains from occupants, equipment and lighting contribute a significant proportion of the heat gains in an office space. Usage of ICT in offices is growing; on the other hand, their efficiency is also improving all the time. Increasing energy efficiency in buildings have led to the situa...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inEnvironmental Engineering. Proceedings of the International Conference on Environmental Engineering. ICEE Vol. 10; pp. 1 - 7
Main Authors Lapinskienė, Vilūnė, Motuzienė, Violeta, Džiugaitė-Tumėnienė, Rasa, Mikučionienė, Rūta
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published Vilnius Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Department of Construction Economics & Property 01.01.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Internal heat gains from occupants, equipment and lighting contribute a significant proportion of the heat gains in an office space. Usage of ICT in offices is growing; on the other hand, their efficiency is also improving all the time. Increasing energy efficiency in buildings have led to the situation, when new, well insulated office buildings, with high internal gains within the working hours may cover low heating energy demand. Such buildings, even in heating dominated countries, such as Lithuania, often also suffer from overheating during the winter heating season. The paper presents the analysis of energy demand of the office building for various plug loads (ICT equipment) internal gains scenarios and demonstrates its influence on buildings energy performance. Simulation results enable to conclude, that when assessing sustainability and energy bills of the building, plug loads play a very important role. Meanwhile, assessing just energy performance influence is very small. Energy performance certification results show, that plug loads may influence energy performance label just for buildings corresponding A+ and A++ labels).
ISSN:2029-7106
2029-7092
DOI:10.3846/enviro.2017.265