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The
International Journal of Ventilation
Volume 2 No 4 March 2004
Paper 8
Flow Network Model based on Power
Balance
as Applied to Cross-Ventilation
Shinsuke Kato
Institute of Industrial Science, University of
Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
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Abstract
This paper reviews the flow
network model based on power balance as applied to wind-induced cross
ventilation in a residential building. The
characteristics of wind-induced
cross-ventilation with open windows in buildings are different from those
of air infiltration through cracks in walls.
The features of the velocity and
pressure distributions are apparently different. In cross-ventilation, it seems
that a kind of stream tube is formed
through the building. A large part
of the dynamic pressure generated at the opening is preserved within the room,
and a major part of the preserved energy is directly convected outside the room.
The preservation of energy is reflected as a decrease in the value of the total
pressure loss coefficient, ζ. The static pressure loss does not
express the total pressure loss through an opening. The flows in the building
usually converge and diverge and thereby lose energy. The lost energy should
also be accurately evaluated as in the total pressure loss coefficient,
ζ, in a consistent manner in the energy-losing process. In this
paper, a flow network model, based on the power balance model, which considers
preservation of dynamic pressure and energy loss evaluation, is introduced. The
power balance model well describes the energy-loss process of diverging and
converging flows. There seems to be a large possibility that the model
introduced works well in predicting the air flow rate of wind-induced
cross-ventilation in a residential bulding compared with the usual models based
on the extended Bernoulli's equation within a stream tube (a one-dimensional energy equation).
Key words:
Cross-ventilation, flow network, power balance.
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