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Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation. / Heiselberg, Per.

Aalborg : Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering, 2006. 64 s. (DCE Lecture Notes; Nr. 5).

Publikation: UndervisningBog

Harvard

Heiselberg, P 2006, Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation. Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering, Aalborg. DCE Lecture Notes, nr. 5

APA

Heiselberg, P. (2006). Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation. Aalborg: Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering. (DCE Lecture Notes; Nr. 5).

CBE

Heiselberg P 2006. Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation. Aalborg: Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering. 64 s. (DCE Lecture Notes; Nr. 5).

MLA

Heiselberg, Per Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation Aalborg: Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering. 2006. (DCE Lecture Notes; ???journalNumber??? 5).

Vancouver

Heiselberg P. Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation. Aalborg: Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering, 2006. 64 s. (DCE Lecture Notes; Nr. 5).

Author

Heiselberg, Per / Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation.

Aalborg : Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering, 2006. 64 s. (DCE Lecture Notes; Nr. 5).

Publikation: UndervisningBog

Bibtex

@book{f2d56000961211dc8188000ea68e967b,
title = "Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation",
publisher = "Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering",
author = "Per Heiselberg",
year = "2006",
series = "DCE Lecture Notes",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation

A1 - Heiselberg,Per

AU - Heiselberg,Per

PB - Aalborg University. Department of Civil Engineering

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - The effectiveness of natural ventilation, i.e. its ability to ensure indoor air quality and passive cooling in a building, depends greatly on the design process. Mechanical ventilation systems can be designed separately from the design of the building in which they are installed. They can also be installed in existing buildings after a few modifications. In contrast, ventilation systems using only natural forces such as wind and thermal buoyancy need to be designed together with the building, since the building itself and its components are the elements that can reduce or increase air movement as<br/>well as influence the air content (dust, pollution etc.). Architects and engineers need to acquire qualitative and quantitative information about the interactions between building characteristics and natural ventilation in order to design buildings and systems consistent with a passive low-energy approach.<br/>Natural ventilation can be used to provide fresh air for the occupants, necessary to maintain acceptable air quality levels, and to cool buildings in cases where the climatic conditions allow it. Natural ventilation is caused by pressure differences at the inlets and outlets of a building envelope, as a result of wind velocity and/or stack effect.

AB - The effectiveness of natural ventilation, i.e. its ability to ensure indoor air quality and passive cooling in a building, depends greatly on the design process. Mechanical ventilation systems can be designed separately from the design of the building in which they are installed. They can also be installed in existing buildings after a few modifications. In contrast, ventilation systems using only natural forces such as wind and thermal buoyancy need to be designed together with the building, since the building itself and its components are the elements that can reduce or increase air movement as<br/>well as influence the air content (dust, pollution etc.). Architects and engineers need to acquire qualitative and quantitative information about the interactions between building characteristics and natural ventilation in order to design buildings and systems consistent with a passive low-energy approach.<br/>Natural ventilation can be used to provide fresh air for the occupants, necessary to maintain acceptable air quality levels, and to cool buildings in cases where the climatic conditions allow it. Natural ventilation is caused by pressure differences at the inlets and outlets of a building envelope, as a result of wind velocity and/or stack effect.

KW - Natural Ventilation

KW - Hybrid Ventilation

KW - Exhaust Air Path

KW - Ventilation Efficiency

KW - Air Quality

KW - Air Distribution

KW - Air Quality

KW - Air Distribution

KW - Ventilation Efficiency

KW - Hybrid Ventilation

KW - Natural Ventilation

KW - Exhaust Air Path

BT - Design of Natural and Hybrid Ventilation

T3 - DCE Lecture Notes

T3 - en_GB

ER -