Published August 1, 2022 | Version v1
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Probabilistic modeling of the indoor climates of residential buildings using EnergyPlus - data set of indoor temperature and relative humidity

  • 1. Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Contributors

Researcher:

  • 1. Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Description

This data supplements the journal article: 

Buechler E, Pallin S, Boudreaux P, Stockdale M. Probabilistic modeling of the indoor climates of residential buildings using EnergyPlus. Journal of Building Physics. 2017;41(3):225-246. doi:10.1177/1744259117701893

Abstract:

The indoor air temperature and relative humidity in residential buildings significantly affect material moisture durability, heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning system performance, and occupant comfort. Therefore, indoor climate data are generally required to define boundary conditions in numerical models that evaluate envelope durability and equipment performance. However, indoor climate data obtained from field studies are influenced by weather, occupant behavior, and internal loads and are generally unrepresentative of the residential building stock. Likewise, whole-building simulation models typically neglect stochastic variables and yield deterministic results that are applicable to only a single home in a specific climate. The purpose of this study was to probabilistically model homes with the simulation engine EnergyPlus to generate indoor climate data that are widely applicable to residential buildings. Monte Carlo methods were used to perform 840,000 simulations on the Oak Ridge National Laboratory supercomputer (Titan) that accounted for stochastic variation in internal loads, air tightness, home size, and thermostat set points. The Effective Moisture Penetration Depth model was used to consider the effects of moisture buffering. The effects of location and building type on indoor climate were analyzed by evaluating six building types and 14 locations across the United States. The average monthly net indoor moisture supply values were calculated for each climate zone, and the distributions of indoor air temperature and relative humidity conditions were compared with ASHRAE 160 and EN 15026 design conditions. The indoor climate data will be incorporated into an online database tool to aid the building community in designing effective heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems and moisture durable building envelopes.

This supplemental data set includes the hourly temperature and relative humidity for the 10th, 50th, and 90th percentile simulations for each building type in each climate zone. The column headings are of the following format buildingtype_climatezone_output_percentile.

There are six building types, B1 (unfinished basement 1-story), B2 (unfinished basement 2-story), C1 (unvented crawlspace 1-story), C2 (unvented crawlspace 2-story), S1 (slab 1-story), and S2 (slab 2-story).

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Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
Journal article: 10.1177/1744259117701893 (DOI)