2

Radiance and blinds

I had an Openstudio model without shading. Then I added interior blinds and ran simulation using EnergyPlus and Radiance. The results were strange (electricity use for interior lights was smaller with blinds (even with slat reflectance 0)). Then I started looking for a glitch, and found out that the electricity use for interior lights is not the same when I simulate a model without a shading and a model with shading always off (which should be he same, right?).

Any sugestion why electricity usage is not the same in both cases?

hribr's avatar
201
hribr
asked 2018-10-10 03:55:00 -0500
__AmirRoth__'s avatar
4.4k
__AmirRoth__
updated 2018-10-10 07:30:18 -0500
edit flag offensive 0 remove flag close merge delete

Comments

add a comment see more comments

1 Answer

1

It's a little difficult to tell exactly what you are comparing and what you even did (i.e. how you simulated blinds with Radiance). But to answer the last part of the post, if you have a model with no shades and another one with shades applied but set to always up (i.e. not deployed) and simulate them both with the OpenStudio Radiance measure, you will definitely get different results because the "no shades" model will have used the single phase method (rays traced from the POI thru the glass to the sky) whereas the shades model -- even if shades are always up -- will use three-phase method, which uses an "air BSDF" for the transfer matrix at the window. All the transfer matrices used by OpenStudio's Radiance measure are Klems basis BSDFs which are of pretty low resolution.

Slat reflectance is not accounted for in the OpenStudio-Radiance BSDFs either, it's a generic blind.

rpg777's avatar
7k
rpg777
answered 2018-10-10 18:48:53 -0500, updated 2018-10-11 11:16:54 -0500
edit flag offensive 0 remove flag delete link

Comments

add a comment see more comments