TY - JOUR KW - Infiltration KW - Air leakage KW - Blower door KW - Fan pressurization measurements AU - Wanyu R Chan AU - William W Nazaroff AU - Phillip N Price AU - Michael D Sohn AU - Ashok J Gadgil AB -
We analyzed more than 70,000 air leakage measurements in houses across the United States to relate leakage area—the effective size of all penetrations of the building shell—to readily available building characteristics such as building size, year built, geographic region, and various construction characteristics. After adjusting for the lackof statisticalrepresentativeness of the data, we found that the distribution of leakage area normalized by floor area is approximately lognormal. Based on a classification tree analysis, year built and floor area are the two most significant predictors of leakage area: older and smaller houses tend to have higher normalized leakage areas than newer and larger ones.Multivariate regressions of normalized leakage are presented with respect to these two factors for three house classifications: low-income households, energy program houses, and conventional houses. We demonstrate a method of applying the regression model to housing characteristics from the American Housing Survey to derive a leakage-area distribution for all single-family houses in the US. The air exchange rates implied by these estimates agree reasonably well with published measurements.
BT - Atmospheric Environment DA - 06/2005 DO - 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2005.01.062 IS - 19 LA - eng N2 -We analyzed more than 70,000 air leakage measurements in houses across the United States to relate leakage area—the effective size of all penetrations of the building shell—to readily available building characteristics such as building size, year built, geographic region, and various construction characteristics. After adjusting for the lackof statisticalrepresentativeness of the data, we found that the distribution of leakage area normalized by floor area is approximately lognormal. Based on a classification tree analysis, year built and floor area are the two most significant predictors of leakage area: older and smaller houses tend to have higher normalized leakage areas than newer and larger ones.Multivariate regressions of normalized leakage are presented with respect to these two factors for three house classifications: low-income households, energy program houses, and conventional houses. We demonstrate a method of applying the regression model to housing characteristics from the American Housing Survey to derive a leakage-area distribution for all single-family houses in the US. The air exchange rates implied by these estimates agree reasonably well with published measurements.
PY - 2005 SP - 3445 EP - 3455 ST - Atmospheric Environment T2 - Atmospheric Environment TI - Analyzing a Database of Residential Air Leakage in the United States VL - 39 SN - 13522310 ER -