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The building volume with hygroscopic materials--an analytical study of a classical building physics problem

Cunningham, M. J.
2003
Building and Environment, 38(2): 329-337
Heat and moisture transfer; Building volumes; Hygroscopy; Moisture emission rates; Ventilation; Vapour pressure


Cunningham, M. J., (2003), "The building volume with hygroscopic materials--an analytical study of a classical building physics problem", Building and Environment, 38(2): 329-337.
Abstract:
A global analytical solution covering all cases of a building volume with hygroscopic materials is given. The mathematical and physical simplifications and assumptions are quite modest. Isothermality is not assumed. Examples are rooms, attics, subfloor spaces and building cavities. All share the same physics describing the vapour pressure in the building volume and the moisture content in the hygroscopic materials as a function of building volume temperature and moisture emission rates, external vapour pressure and building volume ventilation levels, heat and mass transfer between the building volume and the hygroscopic materials, and heat and mass storage and transfer within the hygroscopic materials.

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Author Information and Other Publications Notes
Cunningham, M. J.
BPANZ, Moonshine Road, Judgeford, Private Rag 50908, Porirua, New Zealand. Department of Building Physics at Chalmers University of Technology, G6teborg, Sweden
  1. A field study of the moisture performance of roofs of occupied newly constructed timber framed houses
  2. A prarmeteric study of wall moisture contents using a revised variable indoor relative humidity version of the "MOIST" transient heat and moisture transfer model
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  4. Inferring ventilation and moisture release rates from field psychrometric data only using system identification techniques
  5. Modelling of Moisture Transfer in Structures-III. A Comparison between the Numerical Model SMAHT and Field Data
  6. Predicting psychrometric conditions in biocontaminant microenvironments with a microclimate heat and moisture transfer model - description and field comparison
  7. Using hygroscopic damping of relative humidity and vapour pressure fluctuations to measure room ventilation rates  



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