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Research Article

Categories of indoor environmental quality and building energy demand for heating and cooling

Stefano Paolo Corgnati1Enrico Fabrizio2Daniela Raimondo1( )Marco Filippi1
TEBE Research Group, Dipartimento di Energetica (DENER), Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi 24, 10129 Torino, Italy
DEIAFA, Università di Torino, via Leonardo da Vinci 44, 10095 Grugliasco (TO), Italy
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Abstract

Maintaining suitable indoor climate conditions is a need for the occupants’ well being, while requiring very strictly thermal comfort conditions and very high levels of indoor air quality in buildings represents also a high expense of energy, with its consequence in terms of environmental impact and cost. In fact, it is well known that the indoor environmental quality (IEQ), considering both thermal and indoor air quality aspects, has a primary impact not only on the perceived human comfort, but also on the building energy consumption. This issue is clearly expressed by the European Energy Performance of Buildings Directive 2002/92/EC, together with the most recent 2010/31/EU, which underlines that the expression of a judgment about the energy consumption of a building should be always joint with the corresponding indoor environmental quality level required by occupants. To this aim, the concept of indoor environment categories has been introduced in the EN 15251 standard. These categories range from I to III, where category I refers to the highest level of indoor climate requirement. In the challenge of reducing the environmental impact for air conditioning in buildings, it is essential that IEQ requirements are relaxed in order to widen the variations of the temperature ranges and ventilation air flow rates. In this paper, by means of building energy simulation, the heating and cooling energy demand are calculated for a mechanically controlled office building where different indoor environmental quality levels are required, ranging from category I to category III of EN 15251. The building is located in different European cities (Moscow, Torino and Athens), characterized by significantly different wheatear conditions. The mutual relation between heating and cooling energy demand and the required levels of IEQ is highlighted. The simulations are performed on a typical office room which is adopted as a reference in validation tests of the European Standard EN 15265 to validate calculation procedures of energy use for space heating and cooling.

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Building Simulation
Pages 97-105
Cite this article:
Corgnati SP, Fabrizio E, Raimondo D, et al. Categories of indoor environmental quality and building energy demand for heating and cooling. Building Simulation, 2011, 4(2): 97-105. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12273-011-0023-x

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Received: 04 August 2010
Revised: 17 January 2011
Accepted: 25 January 2011
Published: 04 December 2011
© Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2011
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