Boundary Conditions: Exterior Thermal

To model the external conditions, we use an applied U value (also known as a "convection condition" or "film coefficient"). Because we are simulating a design day, we use values that simulate slow air movement by natural convection and a high ambient temperature.

Note: We need to assign the boundary condition to nine exterior surfaces of the office.
  1. Select the roof surface.

    roof surface

  2. Select the wall surfaces (8 in all). You will need to rotate the model to access the surfaces on the other side:

    select wall

    rotate model

    select other

    Note: You should have nine surfaces selected.
  3. Click Edit from the Boundary Conditions context panel:

    context panel

  4. On the Type row, select Film Coefficient.

    Note: You'll have to scroll down near the bottom of the list...

    film coefficient

    Note: This is the equivalent of a U-value.
  5. On the Unit row, select BTU/ft2/h/R.

    wall unit

  6. On the Film Coefficient row, enter 3.5, and verify the Temperature Units are Fahrenheit.

    temp units

  7. On the Ref Temperature row, enter 85.

    ref temperature

  8. Click Apply.

    What is should look like...

  9. To verify that the film coefficient boundary condition is correctly applied to the exterior surfaces, check the Design Study Bar and the colored stripe on the surfaces:

    1. On the Design Study bar, the Film Coefficient condition should be listed with values of 3.5 BTU/ft2/h/R and 85 Fahrenheit.

    2. There should be a colored stripe on the exterior surfaces that corresponds to the legend.

      design study bar

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