Zone Geometry[LINK]
The internal variables called “Zone Air Volume" and “Zone Floor Area" provide basic geometric information about each zone. EnergyPlus calculates these from the geometry in the IDF, or you may input the zone air volume in the zone input object. These internal variables in Erl programming should be useful during a parametric study where the shape of the building is being varied, as for a massing study. For example, you could use the zone floor area to normalize Erl calculations with a per-unit area. Or you could use the zone air volume to convert between air flows in m3/s to air changes per hour (ACH).
The internal variables called “Zone Multiplier" and “Zone List Multiplier" indicate the multipliers assigned to zones. These can be useful for customizing sizing calculations.
Zone Geometry[LINK]
The internal variables called “Zone Air Volume" and “Zone Floor Area" provide basic geometric information about each zone. EnergyPlus calculates these from the geometry in the IDF, or you may input the zone air volume in the zone input object. These internal variables in Erl programming should be useful during a parametric study where the shape of the building is being varied, as for a massing study. For example, you could use the zone floor area to normalize Erl calculations with a per-unit area. Or you could use the zone air volume to convert between air flows in m3/s to air changes per hour (ACH).
The internal variables called “Zone Multiplier" and “Zone List Multiplier" indicate the multipliers assigned to zones. These can be useful for customizing sizing calculations.
Documentation content copyright © 1996-2024 The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois and the Regents of the University of California through the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. All rights reserved. EnergyPlus is a trademark of the US Department of Energy.
This documentation is made available under the EnergyPlus Open Source License v1.0.