Seasonal Air Quality in Bedrooms with Natural, Mechanical or Hybrid Ventilation Systems and Varied Window Opening Behavior-Field Measurement Results
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Case Study Characteristics
2.2. Methods
3. Analysis and Results
3.1. Carbion Dioxide Concentration
3.2. Temperature
3.3. Relative Humidity
3.4. Residents’ Behavior
3.5. Daily Variability of Registered Parameters
- warm season, high value of the external temperature Te and significant fluctuations between the time of day and night: Te,max = 29.2 °C, Te,min = 7.6 °C (Figure 6),
- warm season, smaller fluctuations in external temperature Te between day and night: Te,max = 24.5 °C, Te,min = 12.1 °C (Figure 7),
- mild season, small fluctuations in external temperature between day and night: Te,max = 16.1 °C, Te,min = 2.6 °C (Figure 8),
- cold season, the lowest recorded temperature values: Te,max = 3 °C, Te,min = −8.3 °C (Figure 9).
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- the fact that a bedroom is ventilated by natural means is not synonymous with the impossibility of maintaining a high-quality internal environment; other important factors are the heating season, bedroom size and door opening behavior,
- maintaining a high-quality internal environment using natural ventilation is, however, more reliable in warm and transitional periods,
- natural ventilation of rooms may increase the relative humidity to a level deviating from comfort standards, and carries the risk of the development of pathogenic organisms (e.g., fungi, mold),
- mechanical ventilation of rooms may cause the relative humidity to drop below the standard of comfort conditions,
- it is possible to effectively ventilate rooms with the use of hybrid ventilation systems, combining mechanical and natural systems in the “change-over” mode,
- effective natural ventilation of rooms requires knowledge, awareness and taking up activity by the residents,
- mechanical ventilation systems are more consistent in shaping the internal environment of a bedroom and are more resistant to the passivity of residents,
- the habits and preferences of the residents in many cases do not correspond to the activities expected for a given building standard.
- Is it possible to determine which of the internal parameters is the main trigger of the residents’ adaptive behaviors?
- What is the impact of active residents’ responses to improve the quality of the indoor environment on the buildings’ energy consumption?
- How does a hybrid ventilation system perform compared to mechanical or natural one in terms of household internal air quality and energy consumption?
- What is the influence of the location of the room in the building, and its location in relation to CO2 emission sources, on the observed measurement results?
- What non-technical factors underpin residents’ practices related to IAQ control in the bedrooms?
- Does the use of a rotary heat exchanger for heat recovery avoid unfavorable drops in internal relative humidity during the heating season?
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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House | NV1 | NV2 | MV1 | MV2 | MV3 | HV1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ventilation type * | NV | NV | MV | MV | MV | HV |
Floor area, m2/High, m | 19.4/2.62 | 23/2.80 | 12/2.70 | 16/2.70 | 12/2.70 | 18.2/2.73 |
Volume, m3 | 50.8 | 64.4 | 32.4 | 43.2 | 32.4 | 33.9 |
No. of occupants | 2 | 2/3 | 2/3 | 2 | 2/1 | 2/3 |
Thermal mass | high | high | Low | low | low | medium |
Floor | ground floor | ground floor | 1st floor | 1st floor | 1st floor | 1st floor |
Window orientation | E | W/N | N | S/E | N | W |
Noise exposure | medium | low | low | low | low | very low |
Data Logger HOBO MX 1102A | Data Logger Comet Vision U3430 | |
---|---|---|
Measuring range | Temperature: 0 °C–50 °C RH: 1–90% CO2: 0 ppm–5000 ppm | Temperature: −20 °C–60 °C RH: 0–100% CO2: 0 ppm–5000 ppm |
Accuracy | Temperature: ±0.21 °C from 0 °C to 50 °C RH: ±2% from 20% to 80% typical to a maximum of ±4.5% including hysteresis at 25 °C; below 20% and above 80% ±6% typical CO2: ±50 ppm ±5% of reading at 25 °C, less than 90% RH non-condensing and 1013 mbar | Temperature: ±0.4 °C RH: ±1.8% CO2: ±(50 ppm + 3% from reading) at 25 °C and 1013 hPa |
Resolution | Temperature: 0.024 °C at 25 °C RH: 0.01% CO2: 1 ppm | Temperature: 0.1 °C RH: 0.1% CO2: 1 ppm |
Sampling interval | 15 min | 15 min |
House | Type of Data Logger | Magnetic Reed Switch Location | Ventilation Operation Mode | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Warm Season Summer–Autumn 22 August–31 October 2021 | Heating Season Winter 9 January–15 March 2022 | |||
NV1 | HOBO MX1102A | corridor | NV | NV |
NV2 | Comet Vision U3430 | bedroom | NV | NV |
MV1 | Comet Vision U3430 | bedroom | MV | MV |
MV2 | Comet Vision U3430 | bedroom | MV | MV |
MV3 | Comet Vision U3430 | bedroom | MV | MV |
HV1 | HOBO MX1102A | bedroom | HV-NV | HV-MV |
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Baborska – Narożny, M.; Kostka, M. Seasonal Air Quality in Bedrooms with Natural, Mechanical or Hybrid Ventilation Systems and Varied Window Opening Behavior-Field Measurement Results. Energies 2022, 15, 9328. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15249328
Baborska – Narożny M, Kostka M. Seasonal Air Quality in Bedrooms with Natural, Mechanical or Hybrid Ventilation Systems and Varied Window Opening Behavior-Field Measurement Results. Energies. 2022; 15(24):9328. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15249328
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaborska – Narożny, Magdalena, and Maria Kostka. 2022. "Seasonal Air Quality in Bedrooms with Natural, Mechanical or Hybrid Ventilation Systems and Varied Window Opening Behavior-Field Measurement Results" Energies 15, no. 24: 9328. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15249328
APA StyleBaborska – Narożny, M., & Kostka, M. (2022). Seasonal Air Quality in Bedrooms with Natural, Mechanical or Hybrid Ventilation Systems and Varied Window Opening Behavior-Field Measurement Results. Energies, 15(24), 9328. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15249328