Abstract

Efforts to enhance the energy efficiency of Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) systems have been bolstered by technical advancements and stringent regulations. However, HVAC systems not only emit during operation due to energy consumption but also have significant embodied emissions, which recent studies show can exceed those of the operational phase. This study introduces an optimization framework aimed at minimizing lifetime emissions—both operational and embodied—for ventilation systems, an area previously underexplored. The optimization framework incorporates detailed calculations of pressure drop, fan power and newly developed life cycle ventilation inventory data with a life cycle assessment perspectiveA case study of ventilation ductwork in a “BREEAM Excellent” certified energy-efficient building in Norway applies this optimization framework. Findings indicate that for this case, optimizing ductwork dimensions can reduce lifetime emissions of the ventilation system by 15 %, compared to the existing designs with an emission intensity of 0.3 kg CO2/kWh. Further, the study examines how the emission intensity of electricity generation and service lifetime influence total emissions, highlighting the growing importance of embodied emissions as electricity generation becomes cleaner. This underscores the necessity of considering both operational and embodied emissions in design decisions. This study presents an optimization tool for low-emissions ventilation design, capable of processing diverse layouts and aiding in decarbonizing ventilation systems towards achieving zero-emission buildings. Future integration with building information modeling (BIM) and artificial intelligence (AI) could further enhance autonomous low-carbon design and decision-making.

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