Question-and-Answer Resource for the Building Energy Modeling Community
Get started with the Help page
Ask Your Question
5

What is the basis for Air Film Resistances used to calculate U-Factor with Film?

asked 2021-06-17 07:00:13 -0600

Keigo's avatar

updated 2021-07-09 16:35:34 -0600

ASHRAE 90.1 prescribes assembly maximum U-factors for walls and roofs, and the U-factors need to be used for baseline case.

From the definition of U-factor in ASHRAE 90.1, it includes resistances of interior air film and exterior air film.

image description

U-Factor with Film [W/m2·K] can be found in Report: Envelope Summary. I think we must match U-Factor with Film with the assembly maximum U-factor prescribed in ASHRAE 90.1 for baseline case.

However, Thermal Resistance [m2·K/W] in Material:NoMass does Not include Interior/Exterior Air Film Resistances. The input Thermal Resistance is equal to the reciprocal of U-Factor no Film.

Therefore, in order to match U-Factor with Film with the assembly maximum U-factor prescribed in ASHRAE 90.1, we need to know the Interior Air Film Resistance and Exterior Air Film Resistance that are used to calculate U-Factor with Film. Please refer to my sketch below.

image description

I know that air film resistance is calculated for each time step based on weather data during energy simulation. But for this U-Factor with Film, I did some case studies with different Thermal Resistance and different weather data, calculated (Interior Air Film Resistance) + (Exterior Air Film Resistance) from the above equation, and found that (Interior Air Film Resistance) + (Exterior Air Film Resistance) was always about 0.150[m2·K/W] for external wall and about 0.189[m2·K/W] for roof. They had nothing to do with weather data. But I don't know what is the basis for these Air Film Resistances? Does anyone know how they are calculated?

I may have overlooked it, but I couldn't find the basis in EngineeringReference and I/O Reference. If possible, I want to know each value of Air Film Resistance: Interior Air Film Resistance and Exterior Air Film Resistance.


P.S.

I noticed my mistake, so please let me correct it.

(Interior Air Film Resistance) + (Exterior Air Film Resistance) for roof is not about 0.189[m2·K/W] but about 0.1373[m2·K/W]. Interior Air Film Resistance for roof is 0.1074271[m2K/W], and Exterior Air Film Resistance for roof is 0.0299387[m2K/W].

In my case study, I mistakenly selected Surface as Outside Boundary Condition of the roof in BuildingSurface:Detailed. Therefore, the roof was recognised as "semi-exterior" surface and 0.0810106[m2·K/W] was used, which resulted in 0.1074271+0.0810106≈0.189[m2·K/W]. After changing Outside Boundary Condition of the roof from Surface to Outdoor, 0.0299387[m2K/W] was used for Exterior Air Film Resistance, and (Interior Air Film Resistance) + (Exterior Air Film Resistance) = 0.1074271+0.0299387 ≈ 0.1373[m2K/W].

For the best answer, please refer to the link that @JasonGlazer attached in his comment. The basis for R-values (Air Film Resistances used to calculate U-Factor with Film) is ASHRAE Standard 90.1 (I-P Edition) Section A9.4.1. Then, the unit is converted from [h·ft2·°F/Btu] to [m2·K/W ... (more)

edit retag flag offensive close merge delete

Comments

1

Thanks for letting us know the basis of the calculation for the air film resistance. I just wanted to know as you mentioned " air film resistance is calculated for each time step" is that true or the value of the air film resistance remains constant?

sachin_arq's avatar sachin_arq  ( 2022-11-15 06:36:21 -0600 )edit
1

@sachin_arq, air film resistance for exterior surfaces is calculated for each time step because the outdoor wind speed in weather files changes. In any algorithm, the surface exterior convective heat transfer coefficient is a function of wind speed. The air film resistance for the interior surfaces may be constant. Anyway, the air film resistance I talked about in this question is at the rated condition.

Keigo's avatar Keigo  ( 2022-12-03 22:17:16 -0600 )edit

2 Answers

Sort by » oldest newest most voted
3

answered 2021-06-17 07:55:23 -0600

The interior and exterior air films are documented in Appendix A of ASHRAE Standard 90.1. See A2.2.1, A2.4.1, A2.5.1 for different types of roofs and A3.1.1, A3.3.1, A3.4.1 for walls.

edit flag offensive delete link more

Comments

Thank you for your reply. I saw Appendix A.

Roof: R-0.03 for exterior air film and R-0.11 for interior air film.

Wall: R-0.03 for exterior air film and R-0.12 for interior air film.

Does EnergyPlus actually use these values to output U-Factor with Film? Air Film Resistances for Wall seem to be the same, but those for Roof seem to be different. I think this may cause a problem because for example, when GBCI review our energy simulation for LEED certification, they will compare the U-factor in ASHRAE90.1 and U-Factor with Film in the summary report, and will notice the discrepancies.

Keigo's avatar Keigo  ( 2021-06-17 10:31:47 -0600 )edit

@JasonGlazer Do you know what interior/exterior air film resistance values are actually used in EnergyPlus for the summary report? Or do you know if there is a way to manually change the settings of those values?

Keigo's avatar Keigo  ( 2021-06-17 10:36:04 -0600 )edit
1

I believe they are set in EnergyPlus in this routine:

https://github.com/NREL/EnergyPlus/bl...

JasonGlazer's avatar JasonGlazer  ( 2021-06-17 10:53:25 -0600 )edit

Film coefficients refer to added thermal insulation due to convection with indoor/outdoor air in contact with the surface's interior and exterior faces. U = [W/m^2K] = 1/(1/h1 + dxw/k + 1/h2), dxw = wall/roof thickness [m], k = wall/roof construction conductivity [W/mK], and h1, h2 = the individual convection heat transfer coefficient [W/m^2*K] with inside zone air/outside ambient air. You are looking for the values of 1/h1 and 1/h2. The surface.uFactor method in the OS SDK includes film coefficients, while the surface.thermalConductance method does not.

sashadf1's avatar sashadf1  ( 2021-06-17 12:18:29 -0600 )edit

@JasonGlazer Thank you so much! These values are exactly what are used in EnergyPlus for the summary report. And I noticed my mistake. In my case study, (Interior Air Film Resistance) + (Exterior Air Film Resistance) was about 0.189m2K/W for roof, which means that 0.1074 was used as Interior Air Film Resistance and 0.081 was used as "Semi-Exterior" Air Film Resistance beacuse I wrongly selected not Outdoors but Surface as Outside Boundary Condition in BuildingSurface:Detailed. After revising it to Outdoors, 0.0299 was used as "Exterior" Air Film Resistance.

Keigo's avatar Keigo  ( 2021-06-17 12:40:29 -0600 )edit
3

answered 2021-06-17 11:22:48 -0600

I believe this question is answered here.

edit flag offensive delete link more

Comments

Oh, that's true. I'm sorry for asking a similar question.

Keigo's avatar Keigo  ( 2021-06-17 12:50:56 -0600 )edit

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

3 followers

Stats

Asked: 2021-06-17 07:00:13 -0600

Seen: 5,145 times

Last updated: Jun 17 '21