CFD Simulation Supported Development of Wind Catcher Shape Topology in a Passive Air Conduction System (PACS)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Shape Design Test Variations of the PACS Intlet Structure
2.2. Simulations and Model Set Up
3. Results
3.1. Test Wind Catchers with Various Inlet Geometries
3.2. Effects of Deflectors
3.3. Modified Deflector Design
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
- The shape and size of the building body around the wind catcher can highly influence the flow field around the wind catcher and its air capturing performance. If the in- and outlet structures of the PACS are aligned in line with each other, the cross directed wind—unaffected from the building body—can enter with highest efficiency into the wind catcher structures’ inlet. In the longitudinal direction, the roof surface behind the wind catcher generates frictional losses and notably lower velocities at the exhaust tower’s outlet, and hence there is a decrease of the vent performance. Therefore, weaker ventilation is present under such circumstances in every construction situation. This lower vent performance can, however, still provide appropriate or even higher vent rates (in one particular study an ACH of 7.5 h−1 was provided, an 846% greater performance as required in EN 15215 [51].
- The developed small-sized wind catchers (smaller than generic, traditional wind catchers [11,13,49]) possess a floor area-related PACS ratio of 2.43% and a volumetric PACS ratio of 5.55%. This cross section represents a small-scale inlet structure solution, in contrast to a previous measured real-world project [34] with a floor area-related PACS ratio of 10% and a volumetric PACS ratio of 30%. A future classification of the diverse historical and contemporary PACSs could rationalize design and development of such ventilation systems.
- The topology development confirms that small-scale wind catchers are less responsive to different shape changes regarding their role in the ACH rate distribution of the PACS. The very similar ventilation air flow values (7.50 h−1 ACH) of most shapes (three basic geometries) in this study supplement the Pearlmutter et al. [46] outcome: while ventilation efficiency rates show similar differences between different inlet geometries, by downscaling the cross section of an inlet chimney, the wind catcher’s ventilation performance becomes less sensible to different geometry types in contrast to larger chimney cross sections.
- A V-shaped layout of vertical deflector walls positively influence the air-capturing ability of a wind catcher’s inlet structure facing the approaching wind direction (in one particular study, the cross direction). If the incident angle of the coming wind flow to the deflector surfaces increases, the ventilation rate decreases (particularly with 2 h−1 ACH) due to unwanted impinging turbulences.
- A wind direction independent, roof-integrated ventilation inlet structure is developed for a DD PACS. Through significant upsizing, the wind catchers’ deflector walls (in this study by 211%) by simultaneously keeping the same inlet opening dimensions, improvements in ventilation rate occur when the wind incident angle to the deflector surfaces are high, i.e., in this study a significant increase of ACH is only in certain wind directions (almost 100% vent increase in the diagonal direction). If the capturing surfaces are in a lower incident angle with the coming wind, counterproductive turbulences enforce reduced ACH performance. In order to gain improvements in all directions, the enlarged deflectors’ lower part should be trimmed back to the initial inlet opening edge. In this way, significant improvement could be achieved in all wind directions (in this study, a mean increase of approx. 1 ACH is achieved).
- Even with enlarged and optimized capturing deflector walls, the shape independent vent behavior of wind catcher versions remains. The ‘parabola + 1 m’ version had only a slightly better mean performance than the ‘empty + 1 m’ wind catcher versions (2.1%), but the small improvement cannot possibly compensate the difficulty of the more complicated construction.
- Even if dimensions of a wind catcher are specified by general experiences, and those should positively influence the performance, sometimes unexpected behavior can occur, because aerodynamic systems react in a complex way to design changes. This is in accordance with the conclusions of Varela-Boydo et al. [30] and Zarmehr et al. [17]. To fundamentally understand the pressure difference-driven PACS, a wide and thorough knowledge is essential, where the parameters are investigated organically.
6. Outlook
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Variable | Grid 3 (Coarse) | Grid 2 (Medium) | Grid 1 (Fine) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
N—number of elements | 353,622 | 776,196 | 1,696,657 | |
V—volume of the mesh [m3] | 847,027 | 847,027 | 847,027 | |
—volume flow rate [m3/s] | 1.86 | 1.79 | 1.78 | |
h—representative cell size [m] | 1.338 | 1.030 | 0.793 | |
Grid 3 Related to Grid 2 | Grid 2 Related to Grid 1 | |||
r—refinement factor | 1.3 | |||
p—apparent order | 6.58 | |||
—extrapolated value | 1.79 | |||
—approximate relative error | 3.80% | 0.71% | ||
—extrapolated relative error | 0.83% | 0.16% | ||
—fine grid convergence index | 1.04% | 0.19% |
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Region | Validated Mesh [34] | Detailed Domain [31] | Simplified Domain (Current Research) |
---|---|---|---|
Total domain size | 500 m × 500 m × 100 m | 200 m × 200 m × 80 m | 105 m × 135 m × 60 m |
Atmospheric | 6 m | 4 m | 4 m |
Macro environment | 3 m | 2 m | 2 m |
Micro environment | 2 m | 1 m | 1 m |
Near building walls | 0.5 m | 0.3 m | 0.3 m |
Towers/openings | 0.3 m | 0.1 m | 0.1 m |
Interior | 0.2 m | 0.25 m | 0.25 m |
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Katona, Á.L.; Háber, I.E.; Kistelegdi, I. CFD Simulation Supported Development of Wind Catcher Shape Topology in a Passive Air Conduction System (PACS). Buildings 2022, 12, 1583. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12101583
Katona ÁL, Háber IE, Kistelegdi I. CFD Simulation Supported Development of Wind Catcher Shape Topology in a Passive Air Conduction System (PACS). Buildings. 2022; 12(10):1583. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12101583
Chicago/Turabian StyleKatona, Ádám László, István Ervin Háber, and István Kistelegdi. 2022. "CFD Simulation Supported Development of Wind Catcher Shape Topology in a Passive Air Conduction System (PACS)" Buildings 12, no. 10: 1583. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12101583
APA StyleKatona, Á. L., Háber, I. E., & Kistelegdi, I. (2022). CFD Simulation Supported Development of Wind Catcher Shape Topology in a Passive Air Conduction System (PACS). Buildings, 12(10), 1583. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12101583