Building Services Engineering: Smart and Sustainable Design for Health and Wellbeing covers the design practices of existing engineering building services and how these traditional methods integrate with newer, smarter developments. These new developments include areas such as smart ventilation, smart glazing systems, smart batteries, smart lighting, smart soundproofing, smart sensors and meters. Combined, these all amount to a healthier lifestyle for the people living within these indoor climates. With over one hundred fully worked examples and tutorial questions, Building Services…mehr
Building Services Engineering: Smart and Sustainable Design for Health and Wellbeing covers the design practices of existing engineering building services and how these traditional methods integrate with newer, smarter developments. These new developments include areas such as smart ventilation, smart glazing systems, smart batteries, smart lighting, smart soundproofing, smart sensors and meters. Combined, these all amount to a healthier lifestyle for the people living within these indoor climates. With over one hundred fully worked examples and tutorial questions, Building Services Engineering: Smart and Sustainable Design for Health and Wellbeing encourages the reader to consider sustainable alternatives within their buildings in order to create a healthier environment for users.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Professor Tarik Al-Shemmeri is an Independent Consultant and a Visiting Lecturer to the School of Chemical Engineering at the University of Birmingham, UK. He has lectured, researched and published many research papers and text books in the area of thermo-fluids, renewable energy, and power generation. Neil Packer is a Chartered Engineer who has taught Mechanical Engineering to students in the Higher Education sector for over 25 years. He has acted as an Energy Consultant on a range of low carbon projects in the UK, mainland Europe, and North Africa.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface xiii
Structure of the Book xv
Notation xxi
1 Ambient Air1
1.1 Overview 1
Learning Outcomes 1
1.2 Why Ambient Air Is Important? 1
1.3 Air Composition 2
1.4 Gas Mixtures 3
1.4.1 Mixture Laws 3
1.4.2 Dalton's Law 4
1.4.3 Gibbs-Dalton Law 5
1.4.4 Ideal Gas Behaviour and the Equation of State 6
1.5 Air Thermodynamic and Transport Properties 7
1.5.1 Gas Density 7
1.5.2 Dynamic Viscosity 7
1.5.3 Specific Heat Capacity 9
1.5.4 Thermal Conductivity 10
1.5.5 Heat Transfer Coefficient 10
1.5.6 Combinations of Properties 11
1.6 Important Energy Concepts 12
1.6.1 First Law of Thermodynamics 12
1.6.2 Thermal Energy 13
1.6.3 Rate of Thermodynamic Work 14
1.6.4 Nonthermal Energy 14
1.6.5 Non-flow Conditions 15
1.6.6 Entropy 15
1.7 Worked Examples 16
1.8 Tutorial Problems 21
2 The Thermodynamics of the Human Machine and Thermal Comfort 25
2.1 Overview 25
Learning Outcomes 25
2.2 Thermal Comfort of Human Beings 26
2.3 Energy Balance of the Human Body 26
2.4 Metabolism ( M) and Physical Work ( W) 27
2.4.1 Latent Heat Loss 28
2.4.1.1 Heat Loss by Perspiration 28
2.4.1.2 Heat Loss by Respiration 29
2.4.2 Sensible Heat Loss 29
2.4.2.1 Heat Loss by Conduction 29
2.4.2.2 Heat Loss by Convection 30
2.4.2.3 Heat Loss by Radiation 30
2.5 Optimum Comfort Temperature 31
2.6 Estimation of Thermal Comfort 31
2.7 Worked Examples 33
2.8 Tutorial Problems 41
3 Ventilation 45
3.1 Overview 45
Learning Outcomes 45
3.2 Concentrations, Contaminants, and the Decay Equation 46
3.2.1 Concentrations 46
3.2.2 The Decay Equation 47
3.3 Natural Ventilation 48
3.3.1 Stack Effect Ventilation 48
3.3.2 Wind Effect Ventilation 50
3.3.3 Combined Wind and Stack Effect Ventilation 51