Balance point temperature
The building balance point temperature is the outdoor air temperature when the heat gains of the building are equal to the heat losses. Internal heat sources due to electric lighting, mechanical equipment, body heat, and solar radiation may offset the need for additional heating although the outdoor temperature may be below the thermostat set-point temperature.
The building balance point temperature is the base temperature necessary to calculate heating degree day to anticipate the annual energy demand to heat a building. The balance point temperature is a consequence of building design and function rather than outdoor weather conditions.
Mathematical definition
The balance point temperature is mathematically defined as:Equation 1:
Where:
- tbalance is the balance point outdoor air temperature, given in °C.
- tThermostat is the building thermostat set-point temperature, given in °C.
- QIHG is the internal heat generation rate per unit floor area due to occupancy, electric lighting and mechanical equipment, given in W/m2. This internal heat generation is not constant due to variability in occupancy, lighting, and equipment operation schedule but is largely considered constant to a first order approximation.
- QSOL is the building heat gain per unit floor area due to solar radiation, given in W/m2. This heat gain is not constant due to solar variability with time of day and year but is largely considered constant to a first order approximation. In winter, it is reasonable to assume QSOL=0.
- Ubldg is the rate of heat transfer across the building envelope per degree temperature difference between outdoor and indoor temperature and per unit floor area, given in W/K/m2. This heat transfer can vary due to variations of fresh air ventilation rate but is largely considered constant to a first order approximation.
Determination Methods
In real-world scenarios, the balance point may be determined in one of two ways. In the energy signature method, a plot is created mapping energy consumption against mean outdoor temperature. The point on the chart at which weather-independent and weather-dependent electricity or gas demand intersect is the balance point temperature. This method only works if large quantities of data on the building energy use are available, preferably on a daily resolution.In the performance line method multiple plots of energy consumption against heating degree days and cooling degree days are created, using a range of balance point temperatures to calculate the degree days. Best-fit second-order polynomials of the form ' are then applied to the plots, which show various levels of curvature across the range of the data depending on the accuracy of the balance point temperature. In plots with overly high balance point temperatures the ' variable is positive, resulting in an upward curve, while plots with low balance point temperatures curve downward due to a negative ' variable. The plot in which ' is closest to zero represents the most accurate balance point temperature. This method may be applied to buildings in which the availability of energy use data is less granular, perhaps only available on a weekly or monthly basis.
Building characteristics
A building's thermal characteristics may be described as either internally load dominated or envelope load dominated, each having a characteristic balance point temperature.Internally load dominated buildings have high internal heat gains from occupants, lighting and equipment. These buildings are usually compact with a low surface-area-to-volume ratio and many exterior walls in each room. The high internal heat gains allow the building to not be strongly affected by outdoor conditions. Large office spaces, schools and auditoriums are typical examples of internal load dominated buildings where the balance point temperature is around.
Envelope load dominated buildings have significant heat loss through the building envelope. These buildings have a high surface-area-to-volume ratio with few exterior walls in each room. Outdoor conditions strongly affect these buildings due to a lack of internal heat gains. Residences, small office buildings and schools are typical examples of skin load dominated buildings where the balance point temperature is set around.
Solar gains can hamper internal load dominated buildings, contributing to overheating, while helping skin dominated buildings that lose heat due to poor envelope performance. Therefore, architects and building designers must strategically control solar gains based on the building characteristics.