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Cooling Load Calculation: CLTD/GLF Method

This document provides an overview of calculating the cooling load of a single family house using the CLTD/GLF method. It includes the floor plan and characteristics of an example house, such as wall and window constructions. It also lists the outdoor and indoor design conditions. The solution section explains that the cooling load must be calculated on a room-by-room basis. It presents the formulas used to calculate heat gain through walls, roof, doors, and windows based on their area, U-value, CLTD, GLF, solar heat gain coefficient, and other factors from ASHRAE tables. The goal is to determine the sensible, latent and total cooling load.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
494 views12 pages

Cooling Load Calculation: CLTD/GLF Method

This document provides an overview of calculating the cooling load of a single family house using the CLTD/GLF method. It includes the floor plan and characteristics of an example house, such as wall and window constructions. It also lists the outdoor and indoor design conditions. The solution section explains that the cooling load must be calculated on a room-by-room basis. It presents the formulas used to calculate heat gain through walls, roof, doors, and windows based on their area, U-value, CLTD, GLF, solar heat gain coefficient, and other factors from ASHRAE tables. The goal is to determine the sensible, latent and total cooling load.

Uploaded by

Honka Vox
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COOLING LOAD CALCULATION

CLTD/GLF method

CLTDs

Cooling Load Temperature Differences

Heat gain through the walls, floor, and ceiling

GLFs

Glass Load Factor


(include transmission and solar radiation)

Heat gain through the window Shading Coefficient (SCs)


(GLF) x (SC) !!!

+ If there is shading

Cooling load calculation of a single family house using CLTD/GLF method


Floor Plan of the Single Family House

Example House Characteristics


Roof construction Conventionel roof-attic-ceiling combination Wall construction Brick, insulation, gypsum wallboard Partition wall Doors Wood, solid core Windows Clear double-pane glass in wood frames 3 mm thick. U = 2.84 W/(m2K) The window glass has a 600 mm overhang at the top. Assume closed, medium-color venetian blinds. U = 0.28 W/(m2K)

U = 0.34 W/(m2K) U = 0.4 W/(m2K)

U = 1.82 W/(m2K)

Outdoor design conditions Temperature of 36 C dry bulb with a 13 K daily ran ge Humidity ratio is 0.0136 kg vapour/kg dry air (23.7 C wet bulb)

Indoor design conditions Temperature of 24 C dry bulb Relative humidity ratio is 50% Occupancy Four people Appliances and lights 470 W for the kitchen and 50% in the living room Find the sensible, latent and total cooling load.
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Solution
The cooling load must be made on a room-by-room basis to determine the proper distribution of air. For walls, roof and door

& = A U (CLTD) [ W ] Q
where CLTD Cooling Load Temperature Difference, K ASHRAE Fundamentals 2001, Ch. 28, Table 1 and 2 according to orientation outdoor design temperature daily temperature range
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Solution
For windows

& = A (GLF) ((SC)) [ W ] Q


where GLF Glass Load Factor, K ASHRAE Fundamentals 2001, Ch. 28, Table 3 and 4 according to window orientation type of glass type of interior shading outdoor design temperature.
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