First time here? Check out the Help page!

Question-and-Answer Resource for the Building Energy Modeling Community
Get started with the Help page
Ask Your Question
1

high pressure sodium lights fraction radiant, visible, return air values?

asked 8 years ago

siddharthpatil5's avatar

updated 8 years ago

I am using a high pressure sodium lights for modeling a grow room. I know the energy per space floor area value but couldn't really find values for fraction radiant, visible and return air. Do I need these values to represent the kind of lighting that I am using or just the energy density is enough? And where will I find these values?

Preview: (hide)

Comments

Our first grow-room question? It's about time.

__AmirRoth__'s avatar __AmirRoth__  ( 8 years ago )

2 Answers

Sort by » oldest newest most voted
3

answered 8 years ago

Return air fraction is non-zero only if the lamps are recessed into a return air plenum, which they probably are not. Visible fraction (i.e., luminous efficiency) for high pressure sodium lamps is 12-22% according to Wikipedia. Radiant fraction is the remainder.

Preview: (hide)
link

Comments

Just adding for posterity since the Wikipedia article's source is no longer online: Engineering Toolbox has efficacy values (not efficiency). The conversion from efficacy to efficiency is to divide by 683 lm/W

matt's avatar matt  ( 3 years ago )
1

answered 8 years ago

updated 8 years ago

You need to look at Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR). See http://agi32.com/blog/2014/12/10/phot...

rpg: oh, I see. Never mind.

Preview: (hide)
link

Comments

1

PAR is only relevant to the plant growth bit. I believe the OP is merely interested in defining the luminaires correctly with respect to the building energy model, Randolph. Believe it or not, Amir's answer -- complete with Wikipedia reference -- is a better one, given the context.

rpg777's avatar rpg777  ( 8 years ago )

Even I can't believe it!

__AmirRoth__'s avatar __AmirRoth__  ( 8 years ago )

Your Answer

Please start posting anonymously - your entry will be published after you log in or create a new account.

Add Answer

Training Workshops

Careers

Question Tools

1 follower

Stats

Asked: 8 years ago

Seen: 246 times

Last updated: Aug 02 '16