New elipse zone within an atrium
Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 2:18 pm
I hope that someone can advise me on this. I am relatively new to IES.
I have built an atrium consisting of a decent number of zones with each wall appropriately defined as a hole in order to simulate a large airspace whilst maintaining some granularity throughout the zone. The atrium will be underfloor heated with natural ventilation.
I would now like to add a couple of large oblong rooms (pods) which will be effectively floating within the atrium (held by walkways).The only reasons I would like these rooms there are to effectively simulate thermal mass and air flow etc, but also to impose an adiabatic surface as these rooms will be mechanically heated/cooled and will affect the comfort conditions on top of, and around them.
I was wandering:
1) How to draw an ellipse shaped zone
2) How to impose this zone onto a built model without redoing the whole thing, similar to partitioning existing zones.
3) Whether I could just build a component and define it as having an adiabatic surface, which would probably do the trick. I'm not sure if this is even possible.
Many Thanks
I have built an atrium consisting of a decent number of zones with each wall appropriately defined as a hole in order to simulate a large airspace whilst maintaining some granularity throughout the zone. The atrium will be underfloor heated with natural ventilation.
I would now like to add a couple of large oblong rooms (pods) which will be effectively floating within the atrium (held by walkways).The only reasons I would like these rooms there are to effectively simulate thermal mass and air flow etc, but also to impose an adiabatic surface as these rooms will be mechanically heated/cooled and will affect the comfort conditions on top of, and around them.
I was wandering:
1) How to draw an ellipse shaped zone
2) How to impose this zone onto a built model without redoing the whole thing, similar to partitioning existing zones.
3) Whether I could just build a component and define it as having an adiabatic surface, which would probably do the trick. I'm not sure if this is even possible.
Many Thanks