Publication | Open Access
Performance Analysis of Solar Desiccant-Evaporative Cooling for a Commercial Building under Different Australian Climates
34
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
EngineeringEnergy-efficient DesignEnergy EfficiencyDifferent Australian ClimatesGreen BuildingBuilding Energy ConservationSystem CoefficientRefrigerationBuilt EnvironmentSdec System ApplicationsDesiccationSolar Thermal EnergySolar Energy UtilisationSolar PowerSdec SystemHeat TransferBuilding EnergyCommercial BuildingSolar CoolingPerformance AnalysisEnergy ManagementSustainable EnergyDewvaporationThermal Engineering
This paper evaluates and compares the system performance of a solar desiccant-evaporative cooling (SDEC) system with a referenced conventional variable air volume (VAV) system for a typical office building in all 8 Australian capital cities. A simulation model of the building is developed using the whole building simulation software EnergyPlus. The performance indicators for the comparison are system coefficient of performance (COP), annual primary energy consumption, annual energy savings, and annual CO2 emissions reduction. The simulation results show that Darwin has the most apparent advantages for SDEC system applications with an annual energy savings of 557 GJ and CO2 emission reduction of 121 tonnes. The maximum system COP is 7. For other climate zones such as Canberra, Hobart and Melbourne, the SDEC system is not as energy efficient as the conventional VAV system.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1