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Glossary
Btu/hr
British thermal unit per hour, also abbreviated Btu/h. One Btu equals
the amount of heat needed to raise the temperature of one pound
of water one degree Fahrenheit. Used for measuring heating and cooling
equipment output.
Building Envelope
The Building Envelope is made up of the elements of a building that
enclose conditioned spaces and through which thermal energy may
be transferred to or from the exterior.
Climate Zone
The Energy Commission established 16 climate zones that represent
a geographic area for which an energy budget is established. These
energy budgets are the basis for the energy standards.
Coefficient of Performance, Cooling (COP)
The coefficient of performance for cooling is "...the ratio
of the rate of net heat removal to the rate of total energy input,
calculated under designated operating conditions and expressed in
consistent units, as determined using the applicable test method
in the Appliance Efficiency Regulations or § 112."
Coefficient of Performance, Heating (COP)
The coefficient of performance for heating is "...the ratio
of the rate of net heat output to the rate of total energy input,
calculated under designated operating conditions and expressed in
consistent units, as determined using the applicable test method
in the Appliance Efficiency Regulations or §112." For
residential buildings, the COP is used for large heat pumps, those
with a capacity greater than 65,000 Btu/h.
Combined Hydronic Space/Water Heating
A combined hydronic space conditioning and water heating system
is one in which both domestic hot water and space heating is supplied
from the same water heating equipment. Combined hydronic space heating
includes both radiant floor systems and convective or fan coil systems.
Conditioned Floor Area (CFA)
Conditioned floor area (CFA) is the [total] floor area (in square
feet) of enclosed conditioned space on all floors of a building,
as measured at the floor level of the exterior surfaces of exterior
walls enclosing the conditioned space.
Conditioned Footprint Area
The conditioned footprint is the total area of the building footprint,
in square feet, not including unconditioned space. The conditioned
footprint area may be equal to the first floor area, or it may be
greater. The footprint area is the total area of floor over unconditioned
space (not over conditioned space), ambient air and slab-on-grade.
One way to think of the conditioned footprint area is as the area
of the largest conditioned floor in the building plus the conditioned
floor area of any projections from other stories that extend beyond
the outline of that largest floor.
Conditioned Space
In residential compliance, conditioned space is space in a building
that is either directly conditioned or indirectly conditioned.
Controlled Ventilation Crawl Space (CVC)
The Energy Commission has approved an exceptional method for analyzing
the energy impact of buildings with raised floors which use foundation
wall insulation and have automatically controlled crawl space vents.
The method is available as an option using an approved computer
method with unique modeling criteria explained in Chapter 5, following
installation guidelines found in Chapter 8.
Cooling Load
The rate at which heat must be extracted from a space to maintain
a desired room condition.
Cool Roof
A cool roof is a roof surface with a high reflectivity and high
emittance. To qualify as a cool roof with the standards, the initial
reflectivity must be greater than 0.40 for concrete and clay tile
roofs and 0.70 for all other roofs. The emittance must be greater
than 0.75. A cool roof rejects solar heat before it enters the building
by reflecting it back to the atmosphere.
Crawl Space
A crawl space is a space immediately under the first floor of a
building adjacent to grade that meets the under-floor clearance
requirements of the UBC [§101]. The thermal characteristics
of a crawl space (or any similar vented unheated space below a raised
floor) tend to reduce heat loss and heat gain into the building
compared with an open, unprotected space below the floor. Compliance
credit for the crawl space is assumed to be equivalent to an additional
R-6 insulation value. R-6 insulation is not modeled when a raised
floor is over an open area or over a garage.
Decorative Gas Appliance
A decorative gas appliance is a "gas appliance that is designed
or installed for visual effect only, cannot burn solid wood, and
simulates a fire in a fireplace." A decorative gas appliance
installed in a new residential building or addition cannot contain
a continuously burning pilot light, and cannot use indoor air for
cooling a firebox jacket if the indoor air is vented to the outside
of the building.
Design Heat Gain
The design heat gain is "...the total calculated heat gain
through the building envelope under design conditions."
Design Heat Loss
The design heat loss is "...the total calculated heat loss
through the building envelope under design conditions."
Directly Conditioned Space
"Directly conditioned space is an enclosed space that is provided
with wood heating, is provided with mechanical heating that has
a capacity exceeding 10 Btu/(hr×ft²), or . . . mechanical
cooling that has a capacity exceeding 5 Btu/(hr×ft²),
unless the space conditioning system is designed and thermostatically
controlled to maintain a process environment temperature less than
55°F or to maintain a process environment temperature greater
than 90°F for the whole space that the system serves, or unless
the space conditioning system is designed and controlled to be incapable
of operating at temperatures above 55°F or incapable of operating
at temperatures below 90°F at design conditions."
Dominant Occupancy
In mixed occupancy buildings, the dominant occupancy is the occupancy
type with the greatest percentage of total conditioned floor area.
Dual-Glazed Greenhouse Windows
"Dual-Glazed Greenhouse Windows are a type of dual-glazed fenestration
product which adds conditioned volume but no conditioned floor area
to a building."
EER (Energy Efficiency Ratio)
The energy efficiency ratio (EER) is "the ratio of net cooling
capacity (in Btu/hr) to total rate of electrical energy (in watts),
of a cooling system under designated operating conditions, as determined
using the applicable test method in the Appliance Efficiency Regulation
or § 112."
Electric Resistance Heating
As mentioned in the explanation of Energy Budget in this Glossary,
electricity is inherently less efficient than gas as a heating energy
source because it must account for losses associated with generation
from depletable fossil fuels and transmission to the building site.
A source energy multiplier of 3.0 (representing a net efficiency
of 33 percent) is assigned to electricity by the standards.
Enclosed Space
"Enclosed space is space that is substantially surrounded by
solid surfaces."
Energy Budget
"Energy budget is the maximum amount of source energy that
a proposed building, or portion of a building, can be designed to
consume, calculated with the approved procedures specified in Title
24, Part 6."
The low-rise residential standards are based upon the concept of
an annual energy budget. This is the measure of source energy used
per year in a building. The energy budget for low-rise residential
buildings includes space heating, space cooling and domestic water
heating. To comply with the standards, the energy use of the proposed
building design must be less than the annual energy budget.
Energy Efficiency Standards
The California state energy standards as set forth in the California
Code of Regulations, Title 24, Part 6.
Energy Factor (EF)
Used to measure the efficiency of water heaters, the Energy Factor
(EF) is "the ratio of energy output to energy consumption of
a water heater, expressed in equivalent units, under designated
operating conditions over a 24-hour use cycle, as determined using
the applicable test method in the Appliance Efficiency Regulations."
Energy Obtained From Depletable Sources
"Energy obtained from depletable sources is electricity purchased
from a public utility, or energy obtained from burning coal, oil,
natural gas, or liquefied petroleum gases."
Energy Obtained From Nondepletable Sources
Also referred to as renewable energy, including solar and wind power,
energy from nondepletable sources is defined as energy that is not
obtained from depletable sources.
Enforcing Agency
The enforcing agency is "the city, county, or state agency
responsible for issuing a building permit."
Evaporative Cooler
Evaporative coolers may be installed as an alternative to air conditioning,
particularly in climate zones with dry air. These systems use water
evaporation and air circulation to provide cooling. Evaporative
coolers use less energy for cooling than minimum efficiency air
conditioners, so the Energy Commission has established higher SEERs
to use when modeling them for compliance.
Exterior Door
An exterior door is any openable opaque surface that separates conditioned
and unconditioned space. A door with one half or less of the surface
area as glazing is an exterior door. A door with more than 50 percent
of its surface area made up of glazing is a fenestration product.
Fenestration Area (Glazing Area)
Fenestration area is defined as the area of all fenestration products
(i.e., windows, skylights and glass doors) in exterior openings,
including the sash or frame area. The nominal area (from nominal
dimensions such as 4o4o) or rough opening is also acceptable. For
details on calculating fenestration area for glass doors, see Exterior
Door. Where the term "glazing area" is used in the standards
it means the entire fenestration area, not just the area of glazing,
unless stated otherwise
Fenestration Product
A fenestration product is: "any transparent or translucent
material plus any sash, frame, mullions, and dividers, in the envelope
of a building, including, but not limited to: windows, sliding glass
doors, French doors, skylights, curtain walls, garden windows, and
other doors with a glazed area of more than one-half of the door
area."
Fireplace
A fireplace is a "hearth and fire chamber or similar prepared
place in which a solid fuel fire may be burned, as defined in UBC
Section 3102 ; these include but are not limited to factory-built
fireplaces, masonry fireplaces, and masonry heaters."
Gas Log
A gas log is "a self-contained, free-standing, open-flame,
gas-burning appliance consisting of a metal frame or base supporting
simulated logs and designed for installation only in a vented fireplace."
Geothermal Heat Pump
A heat pump that uses the earth as a source of energy for heating
and a sink for energy when cooling. Some systems pump water from
an aquifer in the ground and return the water to the ground after
transferring heat from or to the water. A few systems use refrigerant
directly in a loop of piping buried in the ground. Those heat pumps
that use either a water loop or pump water from an aquifer have
efficiency test methods that are accepted by the Energy Commission.
These efficiency values are certified to the Energy Commission by
the manufacturer and are expressed in terms of heating Coefficient
of Performance (COP) and cooling Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER).
Glazing
Glazing is defined as the translucent portion of any fenestration
product, typically glass.
Ground Floor Area
For compliance, the ground floor area is defined as the slab-on-grade
area of a slab-ongrade building and the conditioned footprint area
of a raised floor building.
Habitable Story
A habitable story in a building is a story that "contains space
in which people may work or live in reasonable comfort. A habitable
story is defined as having at least 50 percent of its volume above
grade." The standards use this definition to determine whether
a building is high-rise or low-rise.
Heat Capacity (HC)
The heat capacity of an assembly is "the amount of heat necessary
to raise the temperature of all the components of a unit area in
the assembly one degree F. It is calculated as the sum of the average
thickness times the density times the specific heat for each component,
and is expressed in Btu per square foot per degree F."
Heat Pump
A heat pump is an air conditioner capable of heating by refrigeration.
It may or may not include a capability for cooling. Outside air
or water is used as a heat source or heat sink, depending upon whether
the system is heating or cooling.
Heating, Ventilating and Air Conditioning (HVAC)
The mechanical heating, ventilating and air conditioning system
of the building is also known as the HVAC system. The standards
use various measures of equipment efficiency defined according to
the type of equipment installed. Gas (fossil fuel) heating equipment
is rated according to its Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency (AFUE).
The heating efficiency of electric heat pumps with less than 65,000
Btu/h cooling capacity is rated according to Heating Seasonal Performance
Factor (HSPF). The heating efficiency of heat pumps with cooling
capacity of 65,000 Btu/h or more is rated according to Coefficient
of Performance (COP). Electric resistance heating is rated according
to its HSPF. All electric cooling with less than 65,000 Btu/h output
capacity is rated according to the Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio
(SEER). Electric cooling with an output capacity of 65,000 Btu/h
or more is rated according to its Energy Efficiency Ratio (EER).
(Heat pump cooling is rated according to its SEER or EER, and heat
pump heating by the HSPF or COP). Since few residential buildings
use air conditioners or heat pumps with an output capacity greater
than 65,000 Btu/h, the Low-Rise Residential Standards only use SEER
and HSPF ratings, not EER or COP.
High-Rise Residential
A high-rise residential building is "a building, other than
a hotel/motel, of occupancy group R-1 with four or more habitable
stories." [§101] All hotels and motels, regardless of
the number of stories, and multi-family residential buildings with
four or more habitable stories must comply with § 120 through
149 of the standards (Nonresidential and High-Rise Residential Standards),
rather than §150 through 152 (Low-Rise Residential Standards).
HSPF (Heating Seasonal Performance Factor)
The Heating Seasonal Performance Factor (HSPF ) is "the total
heating output of a heat pump (in British thermal units) during
its normal usage period for heating divided by the total electrical
energy input (in watt-hours) during the same period, as determined
using the applicable test method in the Appliance Efficiency Regulations."
HVAC
See Heating, Ventilating and Air Conditioning.
Hydronic Space Heating
A hydronic space heating system uses water-heating equipment, such
as a storage tank water heater or a boiler, to provide space heating.
Hydronic space heating includes both radiant floor systems and convective
or fan coil systems.
Indirectly Conditioned Space
"Indirectly conditioned space is enclosed space including,
but not limited to, unconditioned volume in atria, that (1) is not
directly conditioned space; and (2) either (a) has an areaweighted
heat transfer coefficient to directly conditioned space exceeding
that to the outdoors or to unconditioned space, or (b) is a space
through which air from directly conditioned spaces is transferred
at a rate exceeding 3 air changes per hour." [§101] Indirectly
conditioned space must be included when calculating total conditioned
floor area. Examples of areas that may be indirectly conditioned
space include enclosed porches, enclosed sunrooms, laundry rooms
and furnace closets.
Infiltration
"Infiltration is uncontrolled inward air leakage from outside
a building, or unconditioned space, including leakage through cracks
and interstices, around windows and doors, and through any other
exterior or demising partition or pipe or duct penetration."
Insulation
Insulating material of the types and forms listed in 118(a) of the
standards (Chapter 2) "may be installed only if the manufacturer
has certified that the insulation complies with the California Quality
Standards for Insulating Material, Title 20, Chapter 4, Article
3." [§118(a)] Insulation must be placed within or contiguous
with a wall, ceiling or floor, or over the surface of any appliance
or its intake or outtake mechanism for the purpose of reducing heat
transfer or reducing adverse temperature fluctuations of the building,
room or appliance. Insulation may be installed in wall, ceiling/roof
and raised floor assemblies and at the edge of a slab-on-grade.
Movable insulation is designed to cover windows and other glazed
openings part of the time to reduce heat loss and heat gain.
Insulation R-Value
The R-value of insulation or any material or building component
is the measure of its thermal resistance expressed in ft2-hr-°F/Btu
(see R-Value). This value may be obtained from Appendix B or from
manufacturer's literature. The rated R-value of mineral fiber (batt)
insulation is based upon its fully expanded thickness. When the
insulation is compressed, the R-value is reduced. For example, an
R-19 batt of insulation expands to a thickness of 6 inches. If it
is compressed into 2x6 framing with an actual depth of 5.5 inches,
the insulation R-Value is lowered to R-17.8.
Interior Partition
An interior wall or floor/ceiling that separates one area of conditioned
space from another within the building envelope.
Knee Wall
A knee wall is a sidewall separating conditioned space from attic
space under a pitched roof. Knee walls should be insulated as an
exterior wall as specified by the chosen method of compliance.
Lighting
The low-rise residential standards have mandatory measures for kitchen
and bathroom lighting, and for incandescent lighting fixtures recessed
into insulated ceilings. Both kitchens and rooms containing a bathtub
or shower are required to have at least one luminaire with lamps
that have an efficacy of at least 40 lumens per watt.
Low-Rise Residential
Any building of occupancy group R, excluding all hotels, all motels
and apartment buildings with four or more habitable stories.
Lumens/Watt
A lumen is a measure of the amount of light available from a given
light source. A watt is a measure of the power requirement for that
light source. The efficacy of a light source is measured by dividing
the lumens by the wattage. The more usable light that a light source
provides per watt, the greater its energy efficiency.
Mixed Occupancy
A building designed and constructed for more than one type of occupancy,
such as a three story building with ground floor retail and second
and third floor residential apartments.
Multi-Family
A dwelling unit of occupancy type R, as defined by the UBC, sharing
a common wall and/or ceiling/floor with at least one other dwelling
unit.
North-Facing
"North-facing is oriented to within 45 degrees of true north,
including 45°0'0" east of north (NE), but excluding 45°0'0"
west of north (NW)." This definition applies only to the prescriptive
packages and master plans analyzed according to the multiple orientation
alternative as explained in Chapter 8. In the computer methods the
actual building orientation must be used, except in the case of
master plans as stated above.
Outside Air
"Outdoor air (Outside air) is air taken from outdoors and not
previously circulated in the building."
Radiant Barriers
Radiant barriers are shiny metallic surfaces that are applied to
the roof of the attic and its end walls. In attics, the radiant
barrier is typically installed on the underside of the attic roof.
Often the radiant barrier is pre-applied to the structural deck
of the attic roof.
Raised Floor
A "raised floor is a floor (partition) over a crawl space,
or an unconditioned space, or ambient air."
Refrigerant Charge
The term “refrigerant charge” refers to the amount of
refrigerant that is installed or “charged” into an air
conditioner or heat pump. The refrigerant is the working fluid in
an air conditioner or heat pump. It is compressed and becomes a
liquid as it enters the condenser. The hot liquid is cooled in the
condenser and flows to the evaporator where it released through
the expansion valve. When the pressure is released, the refrigerant
expands into a gas and cools. Air is passed over the evaporator
to provide the space cooling. When an air conditioner or heat pump
has too much refrigerant (overcharged) the compressor may be damaged.
When an air conditioner has too little refrigerant (undercharged),
the efficiency of the unit is reduced. A thermostatic expansion
valve (TXV) can mitigate the impact of improper refrigerant charge.
R-Value (Thermal Resistance)
The R-value of a material is “the [thermal] resistance of
a material or building component to the passage of heat in (hr-ft2-ºF)/Btu."
The R-value indicates how well a material prevents heat from flowing
through it. R-19 insulation, for example, is only half as effective
at slowing heat transfer as R-38 insulation. When more than one
material is put in series with another in a construction assembly
(such as exterior siding, insulation and interior gypsum board),
the thermal resistance of the assembly is equal to the sum of the
individual resistances.
SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio)
The total cooling of a central air conditioner or heat pump in Btu
during 12 months divided by the total electric energy input in watt-hours
during the same period
Single Family Attached
A multi-family building whose dwelling units share common walls
but do not share any common floors/ceilings is considered Single
Family Attached.
Single Family Building
A single dwelling unit of occupancy type R, as defined in the UBC,
which stands separate and unattached from other dwelling units,
but may have an attached garage. A dwelling unit that is separated
only by a property line and double wall construction (with a space
between the walls) from another dwelling unit and that shares no
common floor/ceiling is also treated as single family.
U-factor
The U-factor is the "overall coefficient of thermal transmittance
of a construction assembly, in Btu/(hr x ft2 x ºF), including
air film resistances at both surfaces."
Unconditioned Space
"Unconditioned space is enclosed space within a building that
is not conditioned space..."
A space is unconditioned if:
• It is not provided with space conditioning;
• It can be isolated from conditioned space by closeable doors;
and
• It is not indirectly conditioned.
Common unconditioned spaces include garages, attics, crawl spaces,
mechanical closets and sunspaces. Refer to Chapter 5 for further
information concerning modeling unconditioned spaces using approved
computer methods.
Vapor Barrier
A vapor barrier is "a material with a permeance of one perm
or less which provides resistance to the transmission of water vapor."
Vapor barriers are only mandatory in Climate Zones 14 and 16.
Zonal Control
Zonal control refers to the practice of dividing a residence into
separately controlled HVAC zones. This may be done by installing
multiple HVAC systems that condition a specific part of the building,
or by installing one HVAC system with a specially designed distribution
system that permits zonal control.
Title 24 - California Energy Calculations - Title 24 Energy
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