Heating and Cooling of Buildings: Design for EfficiencyHeating and Cooling of Buildings, Second Edition by Kreider and Rable covers technologies-from materials to computers-that are exerting a profound effect on the design and operation of buildings. Numerous examples are presented and solved to reinforce important concepts and software applications are integrated throughout.The contents of this edition have been expanded to include a chapter on economic analysis and optimization, new heating and cooling load procedures, more than 200 new homework problems, and new and simplified procedures for ground coupling heat transfer calculations.One of the most notable difference in the second edition of this book is that many of the appendices from the first edition of this book have been moved to the accompanying CD-ROM. The CD-ROM amounts to a searchable database of tables, charts, and information on building codes. For example, there are more than 1,000 tables in the electronic appendices that can be searched by major categories, a table list, or an index of topics. The CD also directs students to the central web site where several hundred links are maintained to hep students find manufacturer and government data, browse in newsgroups, and find any corrections and updates to t e text and date tables. Students have come to expect this kind interaction through Internet searches. |
Other editions - View all
Heating and Cooling of Buildings: Design for Efficiency Jan F. Kreider,Peter Curtiss,Ari Rabl No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
air temperature ASHRAE average boiler Btu/h calculations capacity Chap chiller commercial buildings compressor condenser constant cooling coil cooling load cost curve cycle damper dew point dry-bulb temperature duct effect efficiency electric energy consumption Engineers enthalpy equation equipment evaporative evaporative cooler example Figure flow rate fluid ft² ft³/min glazing hcon heat exchanger heat flow heat gain heat loss heat pump heat transfer heat transfer coefficient heating and cooling heating load humidity ratio HVAC HVAC system ideal gas law indoor inlet input insulation Lookup values mass method needed operating outdoor air outdoor temperature part-load peak pipe pressure drop problem Psat psia psychrometric psychrometric chart refrigerant relative humidity saturated sensor shown in Fig Solution steam supply surface T₁ Table Tbal thermal thermodynamic thermostat valve velocity ventilation volumetric flow rate W/m² wall wet-bulb temperature window zone