kryanl
Mechanical
- Jul 30, 2001
- 34
We have a large (400' x 750') warehouse, for which has now been decided, will require a heating system. I've been asked to estimate the cost. I've completed the walls and roof heat loss portion of my excercise, and it is a rather tight building, so infiltration is pretty low, but where I'm having my most trouble is figuring the heat loss through the floor. Going back through old notes, and searching advice on the internet, I've learned there are two schools of though for calculating heat loss through a floor:
1) calculate U for heat moving directly down into the ground, multiply by the floor surface area,OR
2) calculate U for heat moving through the perimeter and multiply by the perimeter.
The floor of our warehouse, is an 8" thick slab of concrete, with an uninsulated foundation (aside from the water stops, etc.)
Now, for the first case, I can figure that out easily, but come up with an outrageous number. The second case, I admit, I am not sure how to come up with a U-value for a perimeter (would it be considered at a point of the wall thickness as it sits on top of the slab?)
Can anyboldy help clear me up? When do you use case 1, and when do you use case 2?
Thank you so much,
Kayla
1) calculate U for heat moving directly down into the ground, multiply by the floor surface area,OR
2) calculate U for heat moving through the perimeter and multiply by the perimeter.
The floor of our warehouse, is an 8" thick slab of concrete, with an uninsulated foundation (aside from the water stops, etc.)
Now, for the first case, I can figure that out easily, but come up with an outrageous number. The second case, I admit, I am not sure how to come up with a U-value for a perimeter (would it be considered at a point of the wall thickness as it sits on top of the slab?)
Can anyboldy help clear me up? When do you use case 1, and when do you use case 2?
Thank you so much,
Kayla