Abstract

An air-side economizer uses outside air to reduce building cooling system energy demand. In Canada, air economizers are widely applied in non-residential building cooling systems but are rarely implemented in residential single-family houses. This study investigates the free cooling potential of the outside air through a temperature controlled air-side economizer in a hypothetical single-family house for sixteen cities across Canada. A series of thermal models with different aspect and window-to-wall ratios are developed to simulate the hourly and annual building cooling demand for each simulation case. The impacts of climatic conditions and building geometry on the potential annual usable and maximum available free sensible cooling are investigated. Results show that the available free cooling potential ranges from 50% up to 325% of the building cooling needs due to the mild summer weather in most areas of Canada; however, a majority of available free cooling is not able to be utilized. Further studies focused on finding the solutions to maximize the outside air free cooling usage to minimize the building HVAC system cooling energy use is necessary.

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