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reference plane of wall construction with differnet wall thickness

asked 2021-10-24 15:23:52 -0500

Mariha's avatar

updated 2021-10-25 08:54:48 -0500

Hello to all, since I would like to simulate a ventilated living wall on a building facade using an air gap and roof vegetation as materials, I was wondering how Energy Plus deals with the wall structure. How sets E+ the reference level? In my SketchUp model, all the walls are built in 2D, of course. However, the greened walls have a different overall wall thickness than the ungreened walls due to the curtained Living walls. Is the entire wall then flush on the inside in the simulation and the Living walls are really as curtained or does the thicker wall then also offset on the inside because E+ always refers to the middle of the wall thickness? This information is important for me, because I do not want to simulate a completely greened facade, but only greened with living walls in sections.

Thanks for hints and expert tips.

Kind regards Maria

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I you can attache a pic it will be easy to understand de walls.

obuchely's avatar obuchely  ( 2021-10-25 11:56:43 -0500 )edit

I am afraid that I am not (yet) able to do so

Mariha's avatar Mariha  ( 2021-10-25 12:02:06 -0500 )edit

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answered 2021-10-26 09:30:25 -0500

updated 2021-10-26 09:30:46 -0500

E+ doesn't really "refer t other middle of the wall" it is doing 2d not 3d calculations. There are common modeling practices for interior walls to be draw to the middle of the thickness, but exterior walls are generally drawn to the outside of the wall, not the middle. This represents the exterior exposed area well despite, but of course over estimate the floor area a little. A user can override the auto-calculated floor area but that generally isn't done. I feel floors and ceilings generally don't follow the same rule. Most people draw floors at the top of the finished floor, and then windows heights are set above that. They care more about the window sill height to floor related to daylighting than the proper position of the floor relative to the actual building height.

You could adjust your geometry have the thicker wall sit out, but I wouldn't worry about it; the exception might be if you have a large window next to the green wall that's sun exposure may be impacted by your green wall. You can't just step out the facade, because then you have two additional segments that you don't intended to so you would have to have what appears to be gaps in the wall where it steps out, and might have to manually calculate the floor area and volume .

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Thank you David, that information helped me a lot!

Mariha's avatar Mariha  ( 2021-10-27 01:54:19 -0500 )edit

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Asked: 2021-10-24 15:23:52 -0500

Seen: 122 times

Last updated: Oct 26 '21