Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
ASTM Selected Technical Papers
Air Change Rate and Airtightness in BuildingsAvailable to Purchase
By
MH Sherman
MH Sherman
1
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California
,
Berkeley, CA, 94720
;
editor and symposium chairman
Search for other works by this author on:
ISBN-10:
0-8031-1451-6
ISBN:
978-0-8031-1451-7
No. of Pages:
317
Publisher:
ASTM International
Publication date:
1990

C. Y. Show, D. M. Sander, and G. T. Tamura developed a test method to measure the air leakage characteristics of exterior walls of buildings that utilized an outdoor air supply system of ventilation and air handling, taking into account the influence of the stack effect. They applied this method to eight tall buildings in Ottawa, and results were reported.

However, windows and wall constructions in Japan are so different than those in Canada that those results cannot be used directly. To obtain our own data, the authors developed a simple test method that utilizes buoyancy caused by the stack effect instead of fans for pressurization. To open doors on the ground floor or the window at the bottom part of the building while the stack effect is operative is the same as pressurizing the whole building, and to open an exit door at the roof or the window at the upper part of the building is the same as decompressing the whole building.

This method was applied to three tall buildings of Sendai and Tokyo, whose walls were cast-in-place concrete (Building A), precast concrete panel (Building B), and metal panel (Building C). For the test results, infiltration rates through the exterior wall were estimated by approximate calculation. Of the three, it was found that Building A was the tightest and Building C was the loosest. This paper reports the results of the application for the simple test method we developed.

1.
Carrier Coporation
,
Handbook of Air Conditioning System Design, Part I, Load Estimating
, Chap. 6, Table 43, pp. 1–94.
2.
ASHRAE Fundamentals Handbook 1985
, Chap. 22, p. 22.8.
3.
Shaw
,
C. Y.
,
Sander
,
D. M.
, and
Tamura
,
G. T.
, “
Air Leakage Measurements of the Exterior Walls of Tall Buildings
,”
Transactions, ASHRAE
, Vol.
79
, Pt. 2,
1973
, pp. 40–48.
4.
Tamura
,
G. T.
and
Shaw
,
C. Y.
, “
Studies on Exterior Wall Air Tightness and Infiltration of Tall Buildings
,”
Transactions, ASHRAE
, Vol.
82
, Pt. 1,
1976
, pp. 122–134.
5.
Hayakawa
,
S.
and
Togari
,
S.
, “
Stack Effect of Tall Buildings No. 7—Simple Test Method of Evaluating Exterior wall Air Tightness of Tall Office Buildings and Its Applications
,”
Architectural Institute of Japan
, Annual Meeting,
Environmental Engineering Department
,
1983
(in Japanese), pp. 447–448.
6.
Hayakawa
,
S.
and
Togari
,
S.
, “
Stack Effect of Tall Buildings No. 8—Air Tightness of Exterior wall of a High Rise Office Building
,”
Architectural Institute of Japan
, Annual Meeting, Environmental Engineering Department,
1984
(in Japanese), pp. 313–314.
7.
Hayakawa
,
S.
and
Togari
,
S.
, “
Pressure Distribution in Tall Buildings Caused by the Stack Effect and Solutions of Some Troublesome Problems
,”
Transactions of Architectural Institute of Japan
, No.
387
,
1988
, pp. 42–52.
8.
Hayakawa
,
S.
 et al
., “
Estimation and Prevention Method of Air Infiltration Caused by Stack Effect
,” committee report of
Architectural Institute of Japan
,
AIJ Journal
, Vol.
100
, No. 1239,
11
1985
(in Japanese).
This content is only available via PDF.
You do not currently have access to this chapter.

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal