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An extended pressure range comparison of the blower door and novel pulse method for measuring the airtightness of two outdoor chambers with different levels of airtightness

Wood, Christopher; Zheng, Xiaofeng; Vega Pasos, Alan; Hsu, Yun-Sheng; Smith, Luke

Authors

XIAOFENG ZHENG Xiaofeng.Zheng@nottingham.ac.uk
Assistant Professor - Building Services

Alan Vega Pasos

Yun-Sheng Hsu

Luke Smith



Abstract

The steady pressurisation method measures the building leakage in a range of high pressures, typically 10-60 Pa. It is implemented by creating a steady pressure difference across the building envelope and measuring the corresponding airflow exchange rate between the indoor and outdoor simultaneously. This method has been widely used and accepted as the standard test for demonstrating building air-tightness compliance. Conversely, the novel pulse technique, has been developed to measure the building air leakage at low pressures typically in the range of 1-10 Pa. The method is implemented by rapidly releasing a known volume of air from a compressed air tank into the test building, thereby creating an instantaneous pressure rise that quickly reaches ‘quasi-steady’ conditions. The pressure variations in the building and tank are monitored and used for establishing a correlation between leakage and pressure. Although both techniques are designed to make measurements at different pressure levels, direct comparison between the results has always been of interest. In typical dwelling tests, it is not possible to achieve a direct comparison in an overlapped pressure range due to the low pressure nature of the pulse technique. In this study, two small chambers, each with a volume of about 22 m3 and with different leakage levels, were utilised to allow both testing techniques to measure the enclosure leakage in a much wider overlapped pressure range (up to 50 Pa). Blower door tests were performed in both pressurisation and depressurisation modes. Initial tests showed that due to the very small testing environment gaps around the blower door frame could account for up to 60% of the air leakage in the more air tight pod. As the pulse test requires no penetration of the building envelope, sealing of the door frames was essential to ensure a fair comparison. In the sealed condition it was found that there was less than 13% deviation between the blower door and pulse results across the range up to 50 Pa. However for the highly airtight chamber there was less agreement with up to 42% deviation.

Citation

Wood, C., Zheng, X., Vega Pasos, A., Hsu, Y., & Smith, L. (2018). An extended pressure range comparison of the blower door and novel pulse method for measuring the airtightness of two outdoor chambers with different levels of airtightness. In Proceedings of 39th AIVC - 7th TightVent & 5th venticool Conference, Antibes Juan-Les-Pins, France, 18-19 September 2018 (915-925)

Conference Name 39th AIVC - 7th TightVent & 5th venticool Conference
Start Date Sep 18, 2018
End Date Sep 19, 2018
Acceptance Date Jul 1, 2018
Online Publication Date Sep 21, 2018
Publication Date Sep 21, 2018
Deposit Date Oct 12, 2018
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Pages 915-925
Book Title Proceedings of 39th AIVC - 7th TightVent & 5th venticool Conference, Antibes Juan-Les-Pins, France, 18-19 September 2018
Chapter Number N/A
ISBN N/A
Keywords Enclosure airtightness, Blower door, PULSE unit, Outdoor environment, Chamber
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1161596
Related Public URLs http://aivc2018conference.org/

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