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Effect of occupant behavior on peak cooling and dehumidification loads in typical and high-efficiency homes...

by Jeffrey D Munk, Jon Winkler
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Energy and Buildings
Publication Date
Page Numbers
122 to 140
Volume
184

Residential building codes and voluntary labeling programs are continually increasing the energy efficiency requirements of residential buildings. Improving a building’s thermal enclosure, installing the ductwork in conditioned space, and improving the building’s airtightness results in significant reductions in externally-driven sensible and latent cooling loads. As a building’s efficiency is improved, occupant-related internal gains become a larger portion of the building sensible and latent loads. Additionally, internal gains are highly uncertain compared to other load components. In this study, we use a stochastic approach to simulate occupant-related internal gains and compare the internal gains to other sensible and latent heat sources in four house efficiency levels in 10 U.S. climates using whole-building energy simulation software. We compare the expected range in occupant-related internal gains to other building characteristics such as cooling set point, air infiltration rate, and mechanical ventilation rate. We show that in high-efficiency homes, sensible internal gains vary from less than 10% to greater than 40% of the building sensible load under peak total cooling conditions depending on climate and internal gain profile. Likewise, latent internal gains vary from less than 10% to more than 60% of the building latent load under peak total cooling and peak dehumidification conditions depending on climate and internal gain profile.