Recovery Act: Advanced Interaction, Computation, and Visualization Tools for Sustainable Building Design | |
Greenberg, Donald P.1  Hencey, Brandon M.1  | |
[1] Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY (United States) | |
关键词: Building energy modeling; building energy simulation; whole building energy analysis; software applications; | |
DOI : 10.2172/1090620 RP-ID : DOE/EE0003921--13 PID : OSTI ID: 1090620 |
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学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
美国|英语 | |
来源: SciTech Connect | |
【 摘 要 】
Current building energy simulation technology requires excessive labor, time and expertise to create building energy models, excessive computational time for accurate simulations and difficulties with the interpretation of the results. These deficiencies can be ameliorated using modern graphical user interfaces and algorithms which take advantage of modern computer architectures and display capabilities. To prove this hypothesis, we developed an experimental test bed for building energy simulation. This novel test bed environment offers an easy-to-use interactive graphical interface, provides access to innovative simulation modules that run at accelerated computational speeds, and presents new graphics visualization methods to interpret simulation results. Our system offers the promise of dramatic ease of use in comparison with currently available building energy simulation tools. Its modular structure makes it suitable for early stage building design, as a research platform for the investigation of new simulation methods, and as a tool for teaching concepts of sustainable design. Improvements in the accuracy and execution speed of many of the simulation modules are based on the modification of advanced computer graphics rendering algorithms. Significant performance improvements are demonstrated in several computationally expensive energy simulation modules. The incorporation of these modern graphical techniques should advance the state of the art in the domain of whole building energy analysis and building performance simulation, particularly at the conceptual design stage when decisions have the greatest impact. More importantly, these better simulation tools will enable the transition from prescriptive to performative energy codes, resulting in better, more efficient designs for our future built environment.
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RO201704180001888LZ | 2052KB | download |