Simulation Detailed Results
        The main Display options 
 are in the bottom left of the screen. They allow you to control the content 
 of the Detailed data and also the Display style.
         
        The 'Analysis' tab has detailed simulation results (displayed as a line 
 graph by default).
         
        
            
 See also the Analysing Simulation Results Tutorial
         
        For more on how the output is calculated see: Calculation 
 of DesignBuilder Output from EnergyPlus Report Variables.
        Environmental/Comfort Output
        
            - Air Temperature 
 - the calculated average temperature of the zone air.
 
            - Radiant Temperature 
  - the (area * emissivity) weighted average of the zone inside surface temperatures. 
 
            - Operative Temperature 
 - the mean of the zone air and radiant temperatures.
 
            - Outside Dry-Bulb Temperature.
            
 
            - Relative Humidity 
 - the calculated average relative humidity of the air.
 
            - Fanger PMV - Fanger 
 Predicted Mean Vote calculated according to ISO 7730.
 
            - Pierce PMV ET - 
 the Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) calculated using the effective temperature 
 and the Pierce two-node thermal comfort model.                
 
            - Pierce PMV SET - 
 the Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) calculated using the 'Standard' effective 
 temperature and the Pierce two-node thermal comfort model.                
 
            - Pierce Discomfort Index 
 (DISC) - the Discomfort index calculated using the Pierce two-node 
 thermal comfort model.
 
            - Pierce Thermal Sens. Index 
 (TSENS) - the Thermal Sensation Index (PMV) calculated using the 
 Pierce two-node thermal comfort model.
 
            - Kansas Uni TSV - 
 the Thermal Sensation Vote (TSV) calculated using the KSU two-node thermal 
 comfort model.
 
            - Discomfort hrs (summer 
 clothing) - the time when the zone is occupied that the combination 
 of humidity ratio and operative temperature is not in the ASHRAE 
 55-2004 summer 
 clothes region.
 
            - Discomfort hrs (winter 
 clothing) - the time when the zone is occupied that the combination 
 of humidity ratio and operative temperature is not in the ASHRAE 
 55-2004 winter 
 clothes region.
 
            - Discomfort hrs (all clothing) 
  - the time 
 when the zone is occupied that the combination of humidity ratio and operative 
 temperature is not in the ASHRAE 55-2004 summer or winter 
 clothes region.
 
        
         
        More on Comfort Analysis...
        Fabric and ventilation
        
            - Glazing  - 
 the total heat flow to the zone from the glazing, frame and divider of 
 exterior glazing excluding transmitted short-wave solar radiation (which 
 is accounted for in Solar Gains Exterior Windows 
 below). 
 
        
         
        For windows without 
 an interior shading device this heat flow is equal to:
         
        + [Convective heat flow to the zone from 
 the zone side of the glazing]
        + [Net IR heat flow to the zone from zone 
 side of the glazing]
        – [Short-wave radiation from zone transmitted 
 back out the window]
        + [Conduction to zone from window frame and 
 divider, if present]
         
        Here, short-wave radiation is that from lights 
 and diffuse interior solar radiation.
         
        For windows with 
 an interior shading device this heat flow is equal to:
         
         [Convective 
 heat flow to the zone from the air flowing through the gap between glazing 
 and shading device]
        + [Convective heat flow to the zone from 
 the zone side of the shading device]
        + [Net IR heat flow to the zone from the 
 zone side of the glazing]
        + [Net IR heat flow to the zone from the 
 zone side of the shading device]
        – [Short-wave radiation from zone transmitted 
 back out the window]
        + [Conduction to zone from window frame and 
 divider, if present]
         
        
            - Walls - Sum of heat gains to the zone
 from external wall inner surfaces. 
 
            - Roofs - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone from external roof inner surfaces.
 
            - Ceilings - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone
 from ceiling inner surfaces.
 
            - Floors - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone
 from internal floor inner surfaces.
 
            - Floors (ext) - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone
 from external floor inner surfaces (e.g. floor 
 in cantilevered space, roof eaves etc, not ground floors).
 
            - Ground floors - 
 Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone from ground floor inner surfaces.
 
            - Partitions 
 - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone from internal partition inner surfaces.
 
            - Doors and Vents 
 - Sum of heat gains 
  to the zone from door and vent inner surfaces.
 
            - External Infiltration 
 - heat gain through air infiltration (non-unintentional air entry through 
 cracks and holes in building fabric) when using Simple 
 natural ventilation option.
 
            - External Natural Ventilation 
 - heat gain due to the entry of outside air through natural ventilation, 
 as defined on the HVAC tab, when using Simple 
 natural ventilation option.
 
            - Internal Natural Ventilation 
 - heat gain from other zones due to air exchange through open internal 
 windows, doors, vents, holes and virtual partitions.
 
            - External Mechanical Ventilation 
  - heat 
 gain due to the entry of outside air through the air distribution system. 
  You can 
 exclude mechanical ventilation from the cooling design calculations by 
 unchecking the 'Air Distribution On' Model Data.
 
            - External Air - heat 
 gain due to the entry of outside air through external windows, vents, 
 doors, holes and cracks when using Calculated 
 natural ventilation option.
 
            - Mixing Air - heat 
 gain due to the entry of inside mixing air through internal windows, vents, 
 doors and holes when using Scheduled 
 natural ventilation option.
 
        
         
        Note: Surface conduction data for Walls, Roofs, 
 Ceilings, Floors, Partitions and Doors and Vents represents the heat conduction flow just 
 below the surface of the construction and so includes all surface 
 heat transfer mechanisms (convection, long and short-wave radiation).
        
        Airflow
        
            - Mech Vent + Nat Vent + 
 Infiltration - The sum of outside 
 air (in ac/h) flowing into the zone through:
 
            
                - The HVAC air distribution system +
 
                - Infiltration +
 
                - Natural ventilation
 
            
        
        Internal Gains
        
            - Task Lighting - 
 heat gain due to task lighting.
 
            - General Lighting - 
 heat gain due to general lighting.
 
            - Miscellaneous - 
 heat gain due to miscellaneous equipment.
 
            - Process - heat gain 
 due to process equipment.
 
            - Catering - heat 
 gain due to cooking.
 
            - Computer and Equipment 
 - heat gain due to computer and other IT-related equipment.
 
            - Occupancy - sensible 
 gain due to occupants.  Please 
 note that this can vary depending on the internal conditions.  With 
 very high temperatures the sensible gain can drop to zero with all cooling 
 effects taking place through latent heat transfer.
 
            - Solar Gains Exterior Windows 
 -  (used 
 to be called 'Transmitted solar gains'). Short-wave 
 solar radiation transmission through all external 
 windows. For a bare window, this transmitted radiation consists of solar 
 radiation passing through the glass and diffuse radiation from solar reflected 
 from the outside window reveal, if present. For windows with a shade, 
 this transmitted radiation is totally diffuse (shades are assumed to be 
 perfect diffusers). For windows with a blind, this transmitted radiation 
 consists of beam + diffuse short-wave radiation that passes between the 
 slats and diffuse radiation from beam-to-diffuse reflection from the slats. 
 The heating effect of solar radiation on opaque roofs and walls is accounted 
 for in the Roofs and Walls fabric heat conduction data. Solar 
 re-reflected back out of the external window and transmitted through interior 
 windows is not subtracted.
 
            - Solar Gains Interior Windows 
 -  Total 
 beam + diffuse solar radiation transmission through interior 
 windows. Requires the 3-Full interior 
 and exterior solar model option to be 
 set.
 
            - Zone Sensible Cooling 
 - is the overall sensible cooling effect on 
 the zone of any air introduced into the zone through the HVAC system. 
 It includes any 'free cooling' due to introduction of relatively cool 
 outside air and the heating effect of any fans present. Cooling always 
 shows as a negative heat gain in the results. It 
 is therefore not the same as a cooling coil energy delivery when 
 mechanical ventilation is involved. It 
 is best thought of as the overall HVAC cooling contribution to the zone heat balance. More on this below.
 
            - Zone Sensible Heating 
 - is the overall sensible heating effect of any air introduced into the zone through 
 the HVAC system including any 'free heating' due to introduction of relatively 
 warm outside air and the heating effects of fans. It 
 is therefore not the same as a heating coil energy delivery when 
 mechanical ventilation is involved. It 
 is best thought of as the overall HVAC heating contribution to the zone heat balance. More on this below.
 
        
         
        Surface heat gain data refers to heat transfer from the inside surface 
 of the building elements to the zone.
         
        Note: taken 
 together the Internal gains and 
 the Fabric and ventilation data 
 above give an approximate Zone Heat Balance, i.e. the data represents all 
 of the heat flows into and out of the zone. 
         
        Technical Note
        
        
            It is important to understand when looking at the Zone heat balance 
 data that the values do not necessarily add to exactly to zero.  Factors which have a bearing on this are:
             
            
                - Solar radiation values reported by EnergyPlus 
 are gross values and do not account 
 for the radiation re-reflected back out of internal and external windows. 
 EnergyPlus tracks solar radiation in full detail but does not report all 
 of the calculated values. It is not currently possible to generate net solar radiation gains from EnergyPlus. 
 
 
                - Also bear in mind that solar and some internal gains are mostly radiative gains and find their way into the fabric whereas the cooling is to the air. In thermal modelling terms it is not possible to make a simple heat balance of heat which is added to different parts of the thermal network.More specifically, heat transfer gains between the zone and the surfaces 
 cannot be added directly to ventilation gains because they are to different 
 'points' in the zone heat balance (surface heat transfer is to the 'rad-air' 
 point and ventilation is to the 'air' point).
 
                - Minor EnergyPlus inaccuracy in reporting of conduction 
 through window frames causes a minor error (~1%) in Glazing heat gain 
 reported values. This does not affect the rest of the simulation, it is 
 just in the Glazing heat gain report.
 
                - There are issues such as heat conduction through walls, floors, roofs etc and diurnal storage of heat in thermal mass, especially in thermally massive buildings to take into account. When doing heat balances make sure to view data over a reasonable period (> week) to avoid such thermal storage issues.
 
            
         
        System Heat Flows 
        These heat flows are plotted on the System Energy axes:
         
        Simple HVAC
        
         
Zone Heating - energy 
 supplied by local room heaters and reheat coils to maintain room internal 
 heating temperature setpoint temperature when using Compact HVAC data.
Total Cooling is the rate at which total energy (sensible 
 and latent) is removed from the mixed outside and return air stream in 
 order to bring the mixed air stream to the specified 
 temperature and humidity ratio of the supply air stream.
 
Sensible Cooling is the rate at which sensible energy is removed 
 from the mixed outside and return air stream in order to lower its temperature 
 to the specified temperature of 
 the supply air stream. Any energy needed for moisture addition or removal 
 is ignored.
A common question from new users
"What is the difference between Zone Sensible Heating/Cooling (on the Heat Balance graph) and Zone Heating, Sensible/Total Cooling (on the System Energy graph)?" The Zone Sensible Heating is the heating effect of the HVAC system action on the zone heat balance, or in other words, the heating effect of introducing air that is warmer than the zone air. Likewise Zone Sensible Cooling is the cooling effect of the HVAC system on the zone. Note that these are not always directly related to heating and cooling coil energy delivery, especially because of the effect of free cooling from outside air. So for example even if there is no cooling coil operational at a particular time, the Zone Sensible Cooling output on the Heat Balance graph can be high due to introduction of relatively cooler outside air into the space through mechanical ventilation. These Zone Sensible Heating/Cooling outputs will also include a component due to fans (if operational) which will tend to warm air that moves through it. The Zone Heating data in the System energy graph is the energy provided by zone heating equipment such as reheat coils and radiators/baseboard units. Likewise Sensible and Total Cooling report the sensible and total energy transferred by cooling coils to the airstream.
        Compact HVAC
        
         
        
            - Zone Heating - energy 
 supplied by local room heaters and reheat coils to maintain room internal 
 heating temperature setpoint temperature when using Compact HVAC data.
 
            - Preheat - energy 
 supplied by preheat coils to temper the outside air before it enters the 
 outside air mixing box when using Compact HVAC data.
 
            - AHU Heating - energy 
 supplied by the AHU heating coil when using Compact HVAC data.
 
            - Total Cooling - 
 at building level: sensible + 
 latent cooling transfer to the supply air from the AHU cooling coil + 
 any single zone unitary and fan coil units in the building. At zone 
 level: sensible + latent cooling transfer to the supply air from 
 a single zone unitary or fan coil unit.
 
            - Sensible Cooling - 
 sensible only cooling transfer from the cooling coil to the supply air. 
 Latent coil heat can be calculated as the difference: Total 
 Cooling - Sensible Cooling.
 
            - Heat Recovery Sensible 
 Cooling - the sensible 
 cooling rate of the supply air by the heat exchanger. This rate is determined 
 using the supply air mass flow rate through the heat exchanger unit, the 
 supply air inlet and outlet conditions, and the specific heat of the inlet 
 supply air. A positive value is reported if the supply air is cooled by 
 the heat exchanger, else the rate is set to zero.
 
            - Heat Recovery Total Cooling 
 - the total cooling rate 
 of the supply air by the heat exchanger. This rate is determined using 
 the supply air mass flow rate through the heat exchanger unit, and the 
 enthalpy of the supply air entering and leaving the unit. A positive value 
 is reported if the enthalpy of the supply air is decreased by the heat 
 exchanger, else the rate is set to zero.
 
            - Heat Recovery Sensible 
 Heating - the sensible 
 heating rate of the supply air by the heat exchanger. This rate is determined 
 using the supply air mass flow rate through the heat exchanger unit, the 
 supply air inlet and outlet conditions, and the specific heat of the inlet 
 supply air. A positive value is reported if the supply air is heated by 
 the heat exchanger, else the rate is set to zero.
 
            - Heat Recovery Total Heating 
 - the total heating energy added 
 to the supply air by the heat exchanger. 
 
        
        Building Level Only
        Fuel breakdown
        The data for fuel consumption for building level broken down by end-use:
         
        
        Fuel totals
        Total fuel consumption for building, data available at building level 
 only:
         
        
            - Electricity  - 
 total building electricity consumption.
            
 
            - Gas - fuel consumption total 
 building gas consumption.
            
 
            - Oil - 
 total building or oil consumption.
            
 
            - Solid - 
 total building solid fuel consumption.
            
 
            - Bottled gas 
 - total building gas consumption.
            
 
            - Other fuel consumption 
 - total consumption of all other fuels.
            
 
        
        CO2 production
        Total carbon dioxide emission for building, data available at building 
 level only:
         
        
            - CO2 
 - total CO2 emissions mass.
            
 
        
        Site Weather data
        Weather data stored at the site level and derived from the hourly weather 
 file:
         
        
            - Outside 
 Dry-Bulb Temperature
            
 
            - Outside 
 Dew-Point Temperature
            
 
            - Direct 
 Normal Solar
            
 
            - Diffuse 
 Horizontal Solar
            
 
            - Wind 
 Speed
            
 
            - Wind 
 Direction
            
 
            - Atmospheric 
 Pressure
            
 
            - Solar 
 Altitude
            
 
            - Solar 
 Azimuth
            
 
        
         
        Note: Although 
 Site weather data is stored at the Site level, it can be displayed at 
 Building, Block, Zone, Surface and Opening levels too.