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Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 2015, 5(1), 26-35

 

Comparison of Thermal Comfort by Radiant Heating and Convective Heating

 

Shigeru Imai1 and Shoichi Kojima2

1MSc Student, Department of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Saga University, 1 Honjo-machi, Saga-shi, Japan,

E-mail: 13577006@edu.cc.saga-u.ac.jp (Corresponding author).

2Associate Professor, Department of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Saga University, 1 Honjo-machi, Saga-shi, Japan, E-mail: shokjm@cc.saga-u.ac.jp

 

Engineering Management

 

Received January 20, 2014; revision August 3, 2014; accepted on August 25, 2014

 

Available online November 9, 2014

 

Abstract: Currently, convective heating with a heat-pump system, which has high energy efficiency, is popular for room heating. However, it is possible that energy savings using convective heating can be further improved using heat pumps that service both occupied and unoccupied spaces. Moreover, convective heating increases vertical temperature gradients in a room; thus, it is hard to say whether occupants are being provided with sufficient thermal comfort. The purpose of this study is to compare the thermal comfort provided by both radiant and convective heating systems. In this study, a small office room was modeled, and then temperature and airflow distributions in the room were calculated by Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations using ESP-r (Environmental research simulation software). Furthermore, distributions of Standard Effective Temperatures (SET*) were calculated using the air temperature distributions obtained from the CFD simulations, which allows us to compare the thermal comfort provided by convective heating with that provided by radiant heating. The results show that radiant heating can provide satisfactory thermal comfort, even when the room air temperature is low.  However, thermal comfort also depends on the temperature of blowing air, and blowing air must reach occupied regions; thus, only radiant heating cannot circulate sufficient air. In contrast, convective heating increases vertical temperature gradients in a room. Therefore, rather than using only radiant or convective heating, it may be more effective to combine them efficiently.

 

Keywords: Thermal comfort, radiant heating, convective heating, SET*, CFD.

Copyright © Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management (EPPM-Journal).

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 Unported License.

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Citation: Imai, S. and Kojima, S. (2015). Comparison of Thermal Comfort by Radiant Heating and Convective Heating. Journal of Engineering, Project, and Production Management, 5(1), 26-35.

DOI: 10.32738/JEPPM.201501.0004

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