Elsevier

Building and Environment

Volume 108, 1 November 2016, Pages 159-170
Building and Environment

Wind tunnel tests of inter-flat pollutant transmission characteristics in a rectangular multi-storey residential building, part A: Effect of wind direction

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.08.032Get rights and content

Highlights

  • The inter-flat transmission characteristics of gaseous pollutants were investigated using wind tunnel tests.

  • The concentration distributions under single-sided and cross natural ventilation were compared.

  • The CFD method was adopted to assist the analysis of the transmission mechanism.

  • Cross ventilation weakens vertical dispersion for a windward or leeward source compared with single-sided ventilation.

  • Cross ventilation reinforces horizontal transmission for a sideward source compared with single-sided ventilation.

Abstract

The inter-flat dispersion of hazardous air pollutants in residential built environment has become a growing concern, especially in crowed urban areas. The purpose of present study is to investigate the wind induced air pollutant transmission and cross contamination routes in typical buildings. In this paper, a series of experiments was carried out in a boundary layer wind tunnel using a 1:30 scaled model that represented the typical configuration of rectangular multi-storey residential buildings in Shanghai. Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) was employed as tracer gas in the wind tunnel tests. The conditions under two ventilation modes, i.e. single-sided natural ventilation and cross natural ventilation, were compared. The tracer gas concentration distributions under four approaching wind angles were monitored and analyzed. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) method was adopted to assist in analyzing airflow patterns. The experiment results elucidated that in the two ventilation scenarios, both of the vertical and horizontal inter-flat airborne transmission could proceed. The wind direction played a key role on the pollutant concentration distribution. Compared with the single-sided ventilation mode, cross ventilation could weaken the air pollutant dispersion along the vertical direction when the contamination source was on the windward or on the leeward unit. When the wind blowing parallelly to the source unit window, namely the source room was on the sideward, cross ventilation would not suppress the vertical transport on one hand, but reinforce the horizontal transmission on the other hand. The study is helpful for the analysis of infection risk of respiratory diseases in the residential buildings.

Keywords

Wind tunnel test
Gaseous pollutant
Tracer gas
Multi-storey residential buildings

Cited by (0)

View Abstract