Abstract

Natural ventilation (NV) is a key passive strategy to design energy-efficient buildings and improve indoor air quality. Therefore, accurate modeling of the NV effects is a basic requirement to include this technique during the building design process. However, there is an important lack of wind pressure coefficients (Cp) data, essential input parameters for NV models. Besides this, there are no simple but still reliable tools to predict Cp data on buildings with arbitrary shapes and surrounding conditions, which means a significant limitation to NV modeling in real applications. For this reason, the present contribution proposes a novel cloud-based platform to predict wind pressure coefficients on buildings. The platform comprises a set of tools for performing fully unattended computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations of the atmospheric boundary layer and getting reliable Cp data for actual scenarios. CFD-expert decisions throughout the entire workflow are implemented to automatize the generation of the computational domain, the meshing procedure, the solution stage, and the post-processing of the results. To evaluate the performance of the platform, an exhaustive validation against wind tunnel experimental data is carried out for a wide range of case studies. These include buildings with openings, balconies, irregular floor-plans, and surrounding urban environments. The Cp results are in close agreement with experimental data, reducing 60%–77% the prediction error on the openings regarding the EnergyPlus software. The platform introduced shows being a reliable and practical Cp data source for NV modeling in real building design scenarios.Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM)The appendix is available in the online version of this article at 10.1007/s12273-021-0881-9.

Highlights

  • In the last years, natural ventilation (NV) has gained increased attention in the seek for achieving energy-efficient building designs

  • The platform provides a rich set of fully automatic tools and capabilities to predict wind pressure coefficients on buildings in a wide range of actual scenarios

  • Reliable results in relation to experimental ones for case studies with increasing complexity were shown through the exhaustive validation presented in this work

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Summary

Introduction

Natural ventilation (NV) has gained increased attention in the seek for achieving energy-efficient building designs. The potential of the NV effects for several regions around the world has been validated (Sorgato et al 2016; Tong et al 2016; Chen et al 2017), this phenomenon has Natural ventilation occurs when a pressure difference generated by natural forces, wind (wind-driven NV) and/or buoyancy forces (stack-driven NV), acts on one or more openings of the building envelope to induce airflows between the indoor and outdoor spaces This exchange serves to supply and remove air mass through the building openings, and if the outdoor conditions are appropriate

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