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Radiation Heat Transfer for Optimal Thermal Comfort Aided by Simulation Platform

Aug. 15, 2019
Cloud-based simulation allows for more accurate HVAC designs, says SimScale. And that means better wellness and productivity for building occupants.

Munich, Germany – August 13, 2019 –  SimScale, the provider of the world’s first production-ready SaaS application for engineering simulation, today announced the availability of radiation heat transfer analyses using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) within its platform. HVAC architects and engineers continually seek optimal temperature and airflow levels for the comfort of building occupants, and to meet or exceed industry standards. By simulating radiation as part of thermal comfort analyses in the initial design phase of an HVAC project—and within the cloud-based SimScale platform—professionals can more accurately and efficiently iterate their HVAC designs.

“The inclusion of radiation, along with standard conduction and convection analyses, is a key ingredient to accurately predicting how placement of HVAC components such as outlets, air conditioning units or heaters will affect the temperatures and airflow felt by occupants,” said Jon Wilde, Vice President of Customer Success at SimScale. “Accurate thermal comfort analysis means better wellness and productivity for occupants and the avoidance of expensive HVAC configuration changes later.”

Net radiative heat flux plot of an office space. Both heating and cooling panels have been mounted on the ceiling. (Source: SimScale)

SimScale users can simulate the effects of radiation to optimize a comfortable environment within a room or an entire building, including office spaces, residential dwellings, or theaters. According to a University of Chicago study, hot weather can cause people’s regular productivity rate to drop by 4 percent per degree. Conversely, if an employee is too cold they may become distracted from work or even type more slowly. The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) developed the standard ASHRAE 55, which is used for specifying the combinations of factors that produce thermally comfortable environmental conditions that will be acceptable to a majority of the occupants.  

To learn more about SimScale’s new inclusion of radiation within a heat transfer analysis, which is available immediately, visit the SimScale blog.

About SimScale:

Founded in 2012 and based in Munich and Boston, SimScale is the world’s first production-ready SaaS application for simulation. By providing instant access to CFD and FEA to over 150,000 users, SimScale has moved high-fidelity physics simulation technology from a complex and cost-prohibitive desktop application only available to experts in large companies to a user-friendly web application accessible to any designer and engineer in the world via a pay-as-you-go pricing model.

For more information, visit www.simscale.com/.

Media Contact:
Sarah Hawley
Mockingbird Communications for SimScale
[email protected]