Artistic rendering of Smoke  
Airflow and pollutant Transport Group  
Research Areas Tools Recent Publications Staff
Home > Research Areas > Building Airflow and Energy
Research Areas
CBR Protection / Planning
Building Airflow & Energy
Indoor-Outdoor Transport
Particle Transport
Sensor Interpretation
Uncertainty Analysis
Tools
Computational Fluid Dynamics
Chamber Experiments
Field Experiments
Multizone Simulation
Integrated Simulation Tools
Algorithm Development and Model Testing

Building Airflow and Energy

Overview

The Airflow and Pollutant transport Group studies airflow in buildings, and the resulting distribution of pollutants. To this end, the group combines field experiments, chamber studies, and simulations with both whole-building and detailed room models.

The airflow patterns in a building affect its occupants in many ways:

  • Air quality. Good air quality demands a sufficient supply of clean air, to sweep pollutants out of occupied spaces. Airborne pollutants include gases, such as carbon dioxide, and particles, such as cat dander. These pollutants may have sources both inside and outside the building, so airflows across the building envelope can matter as much as the flows from room to room. LBNL's Indoor Environment Department conducts research across a wide spectrum of air quality issues.
     
  • Life safety. Traditionally, life safety in the building airflow context meant smoke control. More recently, protection against chemical, biological, or radiological CBR) attacks has gained in importance. Because air currents can rapidly transport these agents throughout a building, understanding airflow patterns is essential to protecting building occupants from both accidental and intentional releases.
     
  • Energy use. For many buildings, the cost of heating and cooling outdoor air constitutes a large component of energy use. Outdoor air enters a building either intentionally, for example in a ducted ventilation system used to provide fresh air, or unintentionally, for example by infiltration through poorly-sealed doors, or through cracks in the building facade. LBNL's Energy Analysis Department conducts research, and provides information, on this and other important energy issues in buildings. In addition, the Simulation Research Group develops software, such as EnergyPlus and SPARK, targeted at building energy applications. EnergyPlus contains a link to the COMIS multizone airflow model.
     
  • Thermal comfort. Many buildings use their ventilation system not only to provide fresh air to the occupied spaces, but also to heat and cool the rooms as needed. Furthermore, people's thermal comfort depends on the humidity of the air, the local air speed, and temperature stratification. The building's ventilation system helps set all these conditions.

Tools for Airflow Research

The Airflow and Pollutant Transport Group combines simulation and experiments to understand airflow in buildings.

Experimental work includes field studies, such as our intensive investigations of buildings during the Joint Urban 2003 exercises in Oklahoma City. We also conduct laboratory-scale experiments, for example to understand particle deposition in ducts and in walls, to study mixing in rooms, and to understand tracking of particles by human activity.

Simulation tools for airflow research fall into three categories, based on their level of detail:

  • Box models. Box models start with analytical solutions to simple pollutant transport problems, and apply them to regional-scale problems. For example, our work on protecting residences from outdoor plumes treats a house as a single, well-mixed space, and uses statistical methods to estimate the distribution of infiltration values across all homes in a geographical area. This simple model helps emergency planners respond to an outdoor release of pollutant, for example comparing evacuation and various shelter-in-place strategies.
     
  • Multizone models. For more complex buildings, or to study details of flow from room to room, multizone models idealize a whole building as a collection of well-mixed spaces, linked by flow paths. These models calculate zone-to-zone flows using engineering correlations, and estimate the resulting distribution of pollutant within the building. They also can solve problems of infiltration and exfiltration.
     
  • Computational Fluid Dynamics models. At the greatest level of detail, CFD programs find airflows within rooms. CFD techniques can estimate the degree of mixing or stratification within a room, and can determine where air currents will carry a pollutant, based on its point of release within a room. Unfortunately, CFD is too expensive, computationally, to apply to entire buildings.

Specific Research Interests

The Airflow and Pollutant Transport Group mainly studies building airflow in order to support our other research interests. For example:

  • CBR Protection/Planning. Our advice on protecting buildings against a chemical or biological (CB) attack comes, in part, from considering how airflows transport pollutants through buildings. In general, our research on planning and first response guidance draws on all our experimental and computational work on building airflows.
     
  • Sensor interpretation. This research relies on building airflow models in two ways. First, our sensor interpretation algorithms work by examining pollutant concentration measurements as they come in from building sensors, and matching them against pre-existing libraries of concentration predictions. The libraries result from simulating the building under a large number of operating conditions, and with multiple values for the unknown parameters. Second, we test the interpretation algorithms using simulation models.
     
  • Particle transport. Airflow constitutes one of the major driving forces that transport particles through buildings. Many of our experimental work relates to this topic, and we develop and use simulation tools to support particle-tracking studies.
     
  • Uncertainty analysis. Providing guidance on emergency response to pollutant releases in or around buildings requires an understanding of how one building differs from another, and how day-to-day changes in a building's operation and use can affect its airflows. Thus our uncertainty analysis efforts use statistical techniques to study the effect of assumptions about unknown model parameters on the model results. In a like manner, our experimental work seeks to replicate experiments, where possible, in order to understand the natural variation in building systems.

Work on simulation tools includes the improvement of our multizone model, COMIS, and the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics to scope further improvements to COMIS. In addition, we perform research on integrating simulation tools, for example combining CFD and multizone approaches, and making COMIS available as a subroutine for other programs to use.

Area Lead:

David Lorenzetti, , (510) 486-4562
 

Publications

Research Areas | Tools | Recent Publications | Staff | Indoor Environment Department | EETD | LBNL | Webmaster