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Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model

The internal thermal climatic condition of a house is directly affected by how the building envelope (walls, windows and roof) is designed to suit the environment it is exposed to. The way in which the building envelope is constructed has a great affect on the energy required for heating and cooling...

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Main Author: Knutsen, Christopher
Other Authors: Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Mechanical Engineering 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Knutsen, Christopher
author2 Bello-Ochende, Tunde
author_browse Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Knutsen, Christopher
author_facet Bello-Ochende, Tunde
Knutsen, Christopher
author_sort Knutsen, Christopher
collection Thesis
description The internal thermal climatic condition of a house is directly affected by how the building envelope (walls, windows and roof) is designed to suit the environment it is exposed to. The way in which the building envelope is constructed has a great affect on the energy required for heating and cooling to maintain human thermal comfort. Understanding how the internal climatic conditions react to the building envelope construction is therefore of great value. This study investigates how the thermal behaviour inside of a simple house reacts to changes made to the building envelope with the objective to predict how these changes will affect human thermal comfort when optimising the design of the house. A three-dimensional numerical model was created using computational fluid dynamic code (Ansys Fluent) to solve the governing equations that describe the thermal properties inside of a simple house. The geometries and thermophysical properties of the model were altered to simulate changes in the building envelope design to determine how these changes affect the internal thermal climate for both summer and winter environmental conditions. Changes that were made to the building envelope geometry and thermophysical properties include: thickness of the exterior walls, size of the window, and the walls and window glazing constant of emissivity. Results showed that there is a substantial difference in indoor temperatures, and heating and cooling patterns, between summer and winter environmental conditions. The thickness of the walls and size of the windows had a minimal effect on internal climate. It was found that the emissivity of the walls and window glazing had a significant effect on the internal climate conditions, where lowering the constant of emissivity allowed for more stable thermal conditions within the human comfort range.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32740
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:13.838Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Department of Mechanical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Mechanical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32740 Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model Knutsen, Christopher Bello-Ochende, Tunde Computational Fluid Mechanics Heat Transfer Building Envelope Thermal Comfort Buildings The internal thermal climatic condition of a house is directly affected by how the building envelope (walls, windows and roof) is designed to suit the environment it is exposed to. The way in which the building envelope is constructed has a great affect on the energy required for heating and cooling to maintain human thermal comfort. Understanding how the internal climatic conditions react to the building envelope construction is therefore of great value. This study investigates how the thermal behaviour inside of a simple house reacts to changes made to the building envelope with the objective to predict how these changes will affect human thermal comfort when optimising the design of the house. A three-dimensional numerical model was created using computational fluid dynamic code (Ansys Fluent) to solve the governing equations that describe the thermal properties inside of a simple house. The geometries and thermophysical properties of the model were altered to simulate changes in the building envelope design to determine how these changes affect the internal thermal climate for both summer and winter environmental conditions. Changes that were made to the building envelope geometry and thermophysical properties include: thickness of the exterior walls, size of the window, and the walls and window glazing constant of emissivity. Results showed that there is a substantial difference in indoor temperatures, and heating and cooling patterns, between summer and winter environmental conditions. The thickness of the walls and size of the windows had a minimal effect on internal climate. It was found that the emissivity of the walls and window glazing had a significant effect on the internal climate conditions, where lowering the constant of emissivity allowed for more stable thermal conditions within the human comfort range. 2021-02-01T10:13:26Z 2021-02-01T10:13:26Z 2020 2021-01-31T05:51:28Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32740 eng application/pdf Department of Mechanical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Computational Fluid Mechanics
Heat Transfer
Building Envelope
Thermal Comfort
Buildings
Knutsen, Christopher
Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
title_full Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
title_fullStr Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
title_full_unstemmed Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
title_short Thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
title_sort thermal analysis of the internal climate condition of a house using a computational model
topic Computational Fluid Mechanics
Heat Transfer
Building Envelope
Thermal Comfort
Buildings
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32740
work_keys_str_mv AT knutsenchristopher thermalanalysisoftheinternalclimateconditionofahouseusingacomputationalmodel