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On the proper integration of wood stoves in passive houses: investigation using detailed dynamic simulations

Abstract

Wood stoves are attractive for the space-heating (SH) of passive houses. Nevertheless, there are still questions about their integration. Firstly, the power oversizing of the current stoves and their long operating time may lead to unacceptable overheating. Secondly, it is also unclear how one stove can ensure the thermal comfort in the entire building. The paper investigates these aspects using detailed dynamic simulations (TRNSYS) applied to a detached house in Belgium. An 8 kW stove is assumed to be representative of the lowest available powers in the market. Results confirm that a large power modulation is important to prevent overheating. Opening the internal doors, a high building thermal mass and a heat emission dominated by radiation also reduce the overheating risk, but to a smaller extent. Besides, a single stove cannot enforce the thermal comfort during design weather conditions: a peak-load system is then needed. Using more standard conditions, a Typical Meteorological Year (TMY), the stove can mainly perform the SH but it then requires the internal doors inside the building to be opened. The temperature distribution between rooms is in fact dominated by the architectonic properties. Finally, the emission and distribution efficiency of the stove is also investigated.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Energy Research / Termisk energi
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Date

08.01.2013

Year

2013

Published in

Energy and Buildings

ISSN

0378-7788

Volume

59

Page(s)

203 - 213

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository