A procedure was developed for systematically testing whole building energy simulation models and diagnosing the sources of predictive disagreement. Field trials of the method were conducted with a number of detailed state-of-the-art programs by researchers from nations participating in International Energy Agency (IEA) Task 12 and Annex 21. The technique consists of a series of carefully specified test case buildings that progress systematically from extremely simple to relatively realistic. Output values for the cases, such as annual loads, annual maximum and minimum temperatures, peak loads, and some hourly data are compared, and used in conjunction with diagnostic logic to determine the algorithms responsible for prediction differences. The more realistic cases, while geometrically simple, test the ability of the programs to model such combined effects as thermal mass, direct solar gain windows, window shading devices, internally generated heat, infiltration, sunspaces, earth coupling, and deadband and setback thermostat control. The more simplified cases facilitate diagnosis by allowing excitation of particular heat transfer mechanisms. The procedure was very effective at revealing bugs, faulty algorithms, and input errors in a group of building energy simulation programs that may be considered among the world’s best. The output data from the simulation programs can be used as reference ranges for comparing and diagnosing other detailed or simplified design tools.
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February 1995
Research Papers
A Procedure for Testing the Ability of Whole Building Energy Simulation Programs to Thermally Model the Building Fabric
R. D. Judkoff,
R. D. Judkoff
Buildings and Energy Systems Division, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1617 Cole Boulevard, Golden, CO 80401
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J. S. Neymark
J. S. Neymark
Buildings and Energy Systems Division, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1617 Cole Boulevard, Golden, CO 80401
Search for other works by this author on:
R. D. Judkoff
Buildings and Energy Systems Division, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1617 Cole Boulevard, Golden, CO 80401
J. S. Neymark
Buildings and Energy Systems Division, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1617 Cole Boulevard, Golden, CO 80401
J. Sol. Energy Eng. Feb 1995, 117(1): 7-15 (9 pages)
Published Online: February 1, 1995
Article history
Received:
October 1, 1993
Revised:
August 1, 1994
Online:
February 14, 2008
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A commentary has been published:
Comment on “Toward a Numerical Error Bar in CFD” by G. Karniadakis
Citation
Judkoff, R. D., and Neymark, J. S. (February 1, 1995). "A Procedure for Testing the Ability of Whole Building Energy Simulation Programs to Thermally Model the Building Fabric." ASME. J. Sol. Energy Eng. February 1995; 117(1): 7–15. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2847754
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