Abstract
The majority of previous work studying building ventilation flows at laboratory scale have used saline plumes in water. The production of buoyancy forces using salinity variations in water allows dynamic similarity between the small-scale models and the full-scale flows. However, in some situations, such as including the effects of non-adiabatic boundaries, the use of a thermal plume is desirable. The efficacy of using temperature differences to produce buoyancy-driven flows representing natural ventilation of a building in a small-scale model is examined here, with comparison between previous theoretical and new, heat-based, experiments. © 2013 The Author(s).
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CITATION STYLE
Partridge, J. L., & Linden, P. F. (2013). Validity of thermally-driven small-scale ventilated filling box models. Experiments in Fluids, 54(11). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00348-013-1613-4
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