Unpacking mid-season heating demand in social housing
Unpacking mid-season heating demand in social housing
The efficiency of residential heat supply systems is compromised when the heat load varies. Heat load variability is mainly rooted in space heating demand variations. Heating demand is expected to fluctuate the most during mid-season, as this is when users thermally adapt to warmer or colder weather, resulting in what is known as the “thermal adaptation lag”. The aim of this paper is to investigate this weather variability during mid-season leading to fluctuations of heating demand that impact the efficiency of heat supply systems. Here we present research conducted within five high-rise social housing tower blocks located in the city of Southampton,United Kingdom. Heating to the tower blocks is supplied through gas boilers to heat exchangers installed in each flat. Monthly heating demand monitoring from 2013 to 2017 at flat level shows that: (a) the variability of the heating demand is higher in the period November to March and is related to temperature variation, (b) the amount of heat required by Heating Degree Day is not constant. The analysis identifies potential implications for engineers designing heat supply systems for social housing which contribute to reducing the performance gap between building design and use
Aragon, Victoria
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Quintero, Julian David
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Gauthier, Stephanie
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James, Patrick
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Bahaj, Abubakr
a64074cc-2b6e-43df-adac-a8437e7f1b37
September 2018
Aragon, Victoria
f2a397a1-9d24-4f68-8f22-cc3270761d82
Quintero, Julian David
2c9d95f1-6eba-4dfe-805c-febe0215e83c
Gauthier, Stephanie
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
James, Patrick
da0be14a-aa63-46a7-8646-a37f9a02a71b
Bahaj, Abubakr
a64074cc-2b6e-43df-adac-a8437e7f1b37
Aragon, Victoria, Quintero, Julian David, Gauthier, Stephanie, James, Patrick and Bahaj, Abubakr
(2018)
Unpacking mid-season heating demand in social housing.
2018 Building Performance Analysis<br/>Conference and SimBuild Co-Organized by<br/>ASHRAE and IBPSA-USA, , Chicago, United States.
26 - 28 Sep 2018.
8 pp
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
The efficiency of residential heat supply systems is compromised when the heat load varies. Heat load variability is mainly rooted in space heating demand variations. Heating demand is expected to fluctuate the most during mid-season, as this is when users thermally adapt to warmer or colder weather, resulting in what is known as the “thermal adaptation lag”. The aim of this paper is to investigate this weather variability during mid-season leading to fluctuations of heating demand that impact the efficiency of heat supply systems. Here we present research conducted within five high-rise social housing tower blocks located in the city of Southampton,United Kingdom. Heating to the tower blocks is supplied through gas boilers to heat exchangers installed in each flat. Monthly heating demand monitoring from 2013 to 2017 at flat level shows that: (a) the variability of the heating demand is higher in the period November to March and is related to temperature variation, (b) the amount of heat required by Heating Degree Day is not constant. The analysis identifies potential implications for engineers designing heat supply systems for social housing which contribute to reducing the performance gap between building design and use
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Published date: September 2018
Venue - Dates:
2018 Building Performance Analysis<br/>Conference and SimBuild Co-Organized by<br/>ASHRAE and IBPSA-USA, , Chicago, United States, 2018-09-26 - 2018-09-28
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Local EPrints ID: 443519
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443519
PURE UUID: c1fe76fe-26af-466d-bb7f-8af522b05e86
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Date deposited: 27 Aug 2020 16:32
Last modified: 25 Feb 2023 02:51
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Author:
Julian David Quintero
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