The Development of Health-Based Overheating Limit Criteria for School Buildings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of Existing Overheating Criteria for School Buildings
3. Method
3.1. Simulation Models of Representative Buildings
3.1.1. Building Geometry
3.1.2. Building Construction
3.1.3. Internal Casual Heat Gains
3.1.4. Building HVAC System
3.1.5. Building Thermal Zoning
3.2. Airflow Network Model
- Air leakages through the external building surfaces (roofs, walls, exterior doors, non-operable windows), which are handled as leakages through cracks with mass flow coefficients calculated based on the air leakage rate of the whole building (Table 2) by assuming a uniform leakage distribution per surface area;
- Air leakage through the external openable windows (handled automatically in EnergyPlus) based on their openness factor and operation schedule. Windows can be opened only during the space occupancy hours on weekdays if natural ventilation is activated; otherwise, they are closed;
- Air leakage through the horizontal fictitious windows (holes) connecting hollow spaces such as stairwell shafts (handled automatically in EnergyPlus);
- Air leakage through the partially open internal classroom doors leading to the corridor spaces (handled automatically based on their openness factor);
- Air leakage through the closed internal doors of offices, library, gym, stairwells, and corridors. The air leakage data of these components are taken from the air leakage databases of building components of Ricketts [49];
- Exhaust fans (in washroom spaces) are connected to the AFN.
3.3. Building Model Calibration
3.3.1. Field-Monitored Data
3.3.2. Building Energy Use Intensity Data
- The service hot water (SHW) energy use was not included in the model prediction but is calculated based on the boiler seasonal efficiency and typical SHW loads and usage schedules for school buildings as taken from NECB-2017 (65 W/person for classrooms and 90 W/person for offices). The boiler seasonal efficiency was fixed at 60% for old construction and 75% for new construction [52];
- The corresponding annual energy use of SHW was estimated to be 36,176 kWh;
- For spacing heating, a natural gas furnace system was used with an assumed furnace efficiency of 80% for old construction and 90% for new construction. The energy use for the electrical baseboard heating system of the simulation model was therefore converted to gas furnace heating using the aforementioned furnace eficiencies;
- For the annual building cooling energy use, the coefficient of performance (COP) was fixed at 3 for new and retrofit construction and 2.5 for old construction;
- The exterior lighting system was not included in the building simulation model and, therefore, was not accounted for in the EUI.
3.4. Procedure to Evaluate Overheating Risk
3.4.1. Identification of Overheating Events
3.4.2. Health Indicators to Limit Overheating Risk
3.4.3. Overheating Limit Criteria
3.4.4. Simulation Procedure
4. Results
4.1. Overheating Limit Criteria
4.2. Inter-Comparison of Overheating Criteria
5. Discussion
- The general building models were calibrated using the manual calibration approach [83] in which the many unknown input data of the model (envelope construction data, lighting and equipment power densities, space occupancy density, building air leakage rate, operation of windows and interior doors, etc.) are filled by typical or average values of similar real buildings and using some assumptions for the space operation (e.g., controls of window and interior door openings) without any fine-tuning of parameter values. This approach is adopted due to the limited monitoring data of the building spaces (only measurement of indoor and outdoor conditions). However, the model calibration could be further improved using the automated calibration approach and sensitivity analysis in which the unknown values of the main influential parameters are fine-tuned using a statistical or optimization procedure to minimize the error between the simulation and measurement.
- The overheating limit criteria for the three school education stages (Equations (3)–(5)) are developed for healthy students based on some assumptions for their daily rehydration levels (Table 8). However, Figure 6, Figure 7, Figure 9 and Figure 10 can be used to deduce the limit criteria for other real-life values of student rehydration levels specific to given geographical locations. Furthermore, these limit criteria should not be applied to students with special learning needs (due to their disability or learning problems).
- The limit criteria are obtained for Canadian schools under typical cold climates with temperate summers. Under such or similar climates, the body dehydration of students seems to be the only health indicator to account for in overheating risk analysis (the core temperature hardly reaches its limit value, as in Figure 8). Fortunately, body dehydration can be prevented by making cool drinking water available to students in schools and urging them to rehydrate themselves to compensate for the sweating water loss during heat events. However, the situation may be different under other local climates, such as warm, hot, or humid climates where the core temperature may reach its limit value under short exposure times (a few hours), and a third limit criterion (INTL) would be needed to be considered. In this case, the procedure of Section 3.4 should be followed to develop specific criteria with input data, such as those in Table 7 and Table 8, that are suitable for the local climate and population.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
List of Abbreviations
Abbreviation Name | Meaning |
ACH | Air Change per Hour |
AFN | Air flow network |
BB101 | Building Bulletin 101 |
COG | Centre of glass |
DUR | Duration of overheating event |
DURL | Limit value of duration of overheating event |
EUI | Energy use intensity |
EPS | Expanded polystyrene |
HE | Hours of exceedance |
HS | High (secondary) school |
INT | Intensity of overheating event |
INTL | Limit value of intensity of overheating event |
MBE | Mean bias error |
NECB | National Energy Code of Canada for Buildings |
MPMV | Metabolic-based predicted mean vote index |
MS | Middle school |
PS | Primary school |
RMSE | Root mean square error |
SET | Standard Effective Temperature Index |
SETH | Severity of overheating event |
SETHL | Limit value of severity of overheating event |
SWH | Service hot water |
TSV | Thermal sensation vote |
XPS | Extruded polystyrene |
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Reference | Location | Method | Overheating Criteria | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
[7] | UK | Simulation | Percent of occupied hours above 28 °C | Lower internal heat gains, external shadings, and space ventilation could reduce overheating risk but are not sufficient under future projections of climate change. |
[38] | London (UK) | Simulation | Old/new BB101 | The new BB101 criteria are more difficult to meet, suggesting reconsidering the threshold limits to ensure that they adequately represent the physiological and psychological needs of students. |
[39] | London (UK) | Field measurement; thermal comfort surveys | Old/new BB101 | The old BB101 criteria are too lenient, resulting in the occurrence of some overheating events. The new BB101 criteria are more stringent but need further development to accurately reflect the perception of building occupants. |
[40] | UK | Field measurement and comfort surveys | CIBSE TM52 with adjusted adaptative thermal comfort for children | Adult-based overheating criteria (CIBSE TM52) did not permit detecting overheating risk in the schools as were investigated, but the use of children-based criteria did in 3 of 4 schools. |
[41] | 14 UK locations | Simulation | Old BB101 | Only two UK locations fulfilled the old BB101 criteria under the current climate. Additional overheating measures are needed in other locations under the current and future projected climates. |
[42] | Cyprus | Simulation | CIBSE TM52 | The school buildings were unable to meet the CIBSE TM52 criteria for more than 70% of the occupied hours. |
[5] | UK Midlands | Field measurement | Percent of occupied hours above 25 and 28 °C | Most classrooms overheated over 60% of the occupied hours. |
[43] | Montreal (Canada) | Field measurement | Percent of occupied hours above ASHRAE-55 max. Adaptive thermal comfort temperature | Overheated hours (covering July/August) exceeded 80% in most of the monitored classrooms. |
[44] | Montreal (Canada) | Calibrated simulation | New BB101 | Classrooms overheated with more than 110 h under the current climate. A combination of measures would be needed to reduce the risk of overheating in future climate projections. |
Construction | Old (Partial Retrofit) | New (Current) |
---|---|---|
Whole building air leakage rate ACH @75Pa (L/s/m2) (above grade volume) | 9 (7.57) | 4.5 (3.88) |
Ground floor | Insulated slab (U-factor = 0.331 W/m2 K): 100 mm foam insulation; 100 mm concrete slab; 70 mm screed; 30 mm timber flooring | |
Walls | Concrete block (U-factor = 0.5 W/m2 K): 100 mm brick veneer; 25 mm air gap; 38 mm EPS insulation; 200 mm concrete block; 13 mm gypsum board | Steel stud (insulation (EPS) thickness varies with location as in Table 3): 100 mm brick veneer; 25 mm air gap; Insulation (EPS); 13 mm OSB; 150 mm batt steel stud; 13 mm gypsum board |
Roofs | Concrete deck (insulation (XPS) thickness varies with location as in Table 3): 1 mm roof membrane; insulation (XPS); 150 mm concrete slab; 13 mm gypsum board | |
Windows | Double clear glass with aluminum frame (COG U-factor = 2.7 W/m2 K) | Double clear low-emission glass with argon gas and aluminum frame (COG U-factor = 1.33 W/m2 K) |
City | U-Factor of Walls (W/m2 K) | U-Factor of Roofs (W/m2 K) | U-Factor of Retrofitted Roofs (W/m2 K) [45] |
---|---|---|---|
Montreal | 0.236 | 0.153 | 0.198 |
Ottawa | 0.236 | 0.153 | 0.198 |
Toronto | 0.266 | 0.153 | 0.198 |
Calgary | 0.201 | 0.135 | 0.169 |
Vancouver | 0.299 | 0.188 | 0.239 |
Space | Schedule * | Occupancy Density (m2/Person) | Lighting Power Density (W/m2) | Equipment Power Density (W/m2) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Classrooms | D | 7.5 | 10.3 | 5 |
Offices | A | 20 | 10 | 7.5 |
Library | C | 20 | 8.8 | 1 |
Gym | D | 10 | 5.4 | 1 |
Corridor/hall | D | 100 | 7.1 | 0 |
Stairwell | D | 200 | 6.3 | 0 |
Washrooms | D | 30 | 9.1 | 1 |
Error | CR301 | CR302 | Classroom Average |
---|---|---|---|
RMSE-T (°C) | 1.4 | 1.3 | 1.3 |
RMSE-RH (%) | 6.0 | 5.4 | 5.6 |
MBE-T (%) | 1 | 1 | 2 |
MBE-RH (%) | 2 | 1 | −2 |
City | Const. | Electricity (KWh/m2) | Total (kWh/m2) | Benchmark—Electricity (kWh/m2) | Benchmark—EUI (kWh/m2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ottawa | New | 56.47 | 114.89 | 40 [53] | 105 [53] |
Montreal | New | 56.45 | 114.90 | / | / |
Toronto | New | 56.79 | 105.25 | 40 [53] or 95 [55] | 275 [55] |
Vancouver | New | 55.19 | 82.32 | 35.76 [56] | / |
Winnipeg | New | 55.40 | 143.49 | 126.3 [57] | 225 [58] |
Average | New | 55.82 | 111.21 | 80.1 [59] | 200 [54] or 261 [14] |
Ottawa | Old | 56.47 | 176.21 | 59.2 [53] | 231 [54] |
Montreal | Old | 56.45 | 177.51 | / | 183 [54] |
Toronto | Old | 56.79 | 157.06 | 70 [55] | 231 [54] |
Vancouver | Old | 55.19 | 110.53 | / | 181 [54] |
Winnipeg | Old | 55.40 | 235.59 | 115 [57] | 250 [14] |
Average | Old | 55.82 | 170.11 | 80.1 [59] | 181 [54] |
School Type | Occupant Type | Reference Adult Person + | SETd (To) (°C) ++ |
---|---|---|---|
Primary | Children (6–12 years) | 1.2 met & 0.57 clo | 27 (26.5) in May; 28.2 (27.7) in June–September |
Middle | Children (13–15 years) | 27 (26.5) in May; 28.2 (27.7) in June–September | |
Secondary | Young adults (16–18 years) | 30 (29.5) in May; 31.2 (30.7) in June–September |
School Type | Occupant Type | Rehydration Rate (%) | Dehydration Rate without Rehydration (%) | Dehydration Rate with Rehydration (%) | Max. Core Temperature (°C) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Children | 60 | 2 | 5 | 37.6 |
Middle | Children | 60 | 3 | 7.5 | 37.6 |
Secondary | Young adults | 60 | 3 | 7.5 | 37.6 |
Period | Montreal | Ottawa | Toronto | Calgary | Vancouver |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Historical | 2010 | 2010 | 2006 | 2007 | 1989 |
Future–2050 | 2047 | 2054 | 2060 | 2052 | 2052 |
Time | 8–9 | 9–10 | 10–11 | 11–16 | 16–24 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Space | Gym | Classroom | Gym | Classroom | None |
Activity | Before classes | Classes | Activity | Classes | None |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Laouadi, A.; Ji, L.; Jandaghian, Z.; Lacasse, M.A.; Wang, L. The Development of Health-Based Overheating Limit Criteria for School Buildings. Buildings 2024, 14, 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010165
Laouadi A, Ji L, Jandaghian Z, Lacasse MA, Wang L. The Development of Health-Based Overheating Limit Criteria for School Buildings. Buildings. 2024; 14(1):165. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010165
Chicago/Turabian StyleLaouadi, Abdelaziz, Lili Ji, Zahra Jandaghian, Michael A. Lacasse, and Liangzhu Wang. 2024. "The Development of Health-Based Overheating Limit Criteria for School Buildings" Buildings 14, no. 1: 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010165
APA StyleLaouadi, A., Ji, L., Jandaghian, Z., Lacasse, M. A., & Wang, L. (2024). The Development of Health-Based Overheating Limit Criteria for School Buildings. Buildings, 14(1), 165. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010165