Jan. 11, 2005: New Standard Aids In Evaluating Energy Analysis Programs
ATLANTA - To comply with the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers' (ASHRAE's) energy conservation standard, users must now test energy analysis computer programs with the Society's Standard 140. ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 140-2004, "Standard Method of Test for the Evaluation of Building Energy Analysis Computer Programs," specifies test procedures for evaluating the technical capabilities and ranges of applicability of computer programs that calculate the thermal performance of buildings and their HVAC systems.
"A state-of-the-art whole building energy simulation computer program may have on the order of 100,000 lines of computer code," said Ron Judkoff, director of the Buildings and Thermal Systems Center at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, Colo., and chair of the committee that wrote the standard. "Even a minor typo in a single line of code can have significant and not easily knowable negative consequences for the results produced by the program. Many consultants use computer simulation in their professional practice for the design of building HVAC systems. For these reasons, ASHRAE Standard 90.1 requires that whole building energy computer simulation software be tested with Standard 140."