| calcPtse {comf} | R Documentation |
Predicted Thermal Sensation based on 2-Node Model adjusted for Expectancy
Description
calcPtse calculates Predicted Thermal Sensation based on the
2-Node-Model by Gagge et al. and adjusts its output according to expectancy
factor
Usage
calcPtse(ta, tr, vel, rh, clo = .5, met = 1, wme = 0, pb = 760,
ltime = 60, ht = 171, wt = 70, tu = 40, esCoeff)
Arguments
ta |
a numeric value presenting air temperature in [degree C] |
tr |
a numeric value presenting mean radiant temperature in [degree C] |
vel |
a numeric value presenting air velocity in [m/s] |
rh |
a numeric value presenting relative humidity [%] |
clo |
a numeric value presenting clothing insulation level in [clo] |
met |
a numeric value presenting metabolic rate in [met] |
wme |
a numeric value presenting external work in [met] |
pb |
a numeric value presenting barometric pressure in [torr] or [mmHg] |
ltime |
a numeric value presenting exposure time in [minutes] |
ht |
a numeric value presenting body height in [cm] |
wt |
a numeric value presenting body weight in [kg] |
tu |
a numeric value presenting turbulence intensity in [%] |
esCoeff |
a numeric values presenting expectancy factor [-] |
Details
All variables must have the same length 1. For the calculation of several
values use function calcComfInd. The value of obj defines
whether the function will use the version presented in ASHRAE 55-2013 for
adjustment of pmv (obj = "pmvadj"), or the original code by Gagge to calculate
set (obj = "set"). In the version presented in ASHRAE 55-2013, the lines of
code related to self-generated convection is deleted. Therefore, a difference
can only be seen at higher values of met.
Value
calcPtse returns a dataframe containing the Predicted Thermal
Sensation value
Note
In case one of the variables is not given, a standard value will be taken
from a list (see createCond for details).
Author(s)
The code for calc2Node is based on the code in BASIC and C++ presented
by Fountain and Huizenga (1995). The translation into R-language and comparison
with ASHRAE 55-2013 conducted by Marcel Schweiker.
References
ASHRAE Standard 55-2013. Thermal environmental conditions for human occupancy. American society of heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineering, Atlanta, USA, 2013. Fountain & Huizenga (1995) A thermal sensation model for use by the engineering profession ASHRAE RP-781 Final report.
Gagge, Fobelets & Berglund (1986) A standard predictive index of human response to the thermal environment, ASHRAE transactions, 92 (2B), 709-731. Coefficients are calculated based on Gao, Wang & Wargocki (2015) <doi:10.1016/j.buildenv.2015.04.030> The aPMV concept was introduced by Yao, Li & Liu (2009) <doi:10.1016/j.buildenv.2009.02.014> The ePMV concept was introudced by Fanger & Toftum (2002) <doi:10.1016/S0378-7788(02)00003-8>
See Also
see also calcComfInd and calc2Node
Examples
## Using several rows of data:
ta <- c(20,22,24)
tr <- ta
vel <- rep(.15,3)
rh <- rep(50,3)
esCoeff <- 0.5
maxLength <- max(sapply(list(ta, tr, vel, rh), length))
ptse <- sapply(seq(maxLength), function(x) { calcPtse(ta[x], tr[x], vel[x],
rh[x], esCoeff=esCoeff) } )