New Heating and Cooling Concepts
A special issue of Applied Sciences (ISSN 2076-3417). This special issue belongs to the section "Energy Science and Technology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 December 2018) | Viewed by 36655
Special Issue Editors
Interests: indoor air quality; thermal comfort; occupant behavior; buildings’ monitoring; energy performance of buildings; heating; cooling; ventilation systems; air cleaning; personalized systems; wearable devices for heating-cooling; measurements of indoor environmental quality
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: indoor environmental quality (IEQ); human thermal comfort; low temperature heating and high temperature cooling systems (particularly water-based radiant heating and cooling systems), their integration with renewable energy resources; thermodynamic analyses of HVAC systems and building components; building energy performance simulation; applied computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Heating, cooling, and ventilation systems are responsible for a large part of global energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. A paradigm shift from fossil fuel based heating and cooling systems to more energy- and resource-efficient heating and cooling systems is necessary, and this shift should happen without sacrificing, and preferably by improving, occupant comfort and health.
It is not possible to think of buildings and their heating and cooling systems as separate parts. Therefore, the whole system structure from the heating or cooling source to the indoor terminal unit should be considered, and this requires a holistic thinking and optimization. With the ever-improving technology, buildings and their system are connected to each other and it is necessary to think of buildings as a part of a larger energy infrastructure and network.
Given the recent research trends and needs, this Special Issue will cover the state-of-the-art in heating, cooling, and ventilation systems in, mainly but not limited to, buildings. The focus will be on the innovative applications and control approaches, which could reduce the energy use remarkably, advance the integration of renewable energy resources into buildings, and improve occupant comfort and health.
Prof. Bjarne W. Olesen
Dr. Ongun Berk Kazanci
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- Radiant heating and cooling
- phase change materials
- evaporative cooling
- ventilative cooling
- thermal energy storage
- renewable energy
- personal environmental control
- air cleaning
- model predictive control
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