Do you want to contribute to healthy and energy efficient residential buildings? Do you want to improve our indoor environment in which we spend ~90% of our time? This PhD research, as part of the larger NudgeFlow project, may initiate a paradigm shift in how we ventilate our buildings. Interested in this exciting challenge? Then please apply.Job Description We envision the next generation in residential ventilation systems that is robust, requires minimal intervention when implementing in an existing dwelling (and thus suitable for renovation) and guarantees a good IAQ and low energy use via user-and-context-aware control. This smart system, which we call a NudgeFlow system, 'nudges' or manipulates the natural airflow through the whole dwelling. To achieve this, in-depth knowledge is required on several aspects related to this concept.
We offer a PhD position (4-year contract) within the 'Nudgeflow' project; a project in collaboration with KU Leuven, Ghent University, UAntwerpen, and Buildwise that will start in April 2024. You will be working on a new generation of decentralized ventilation systems for residential buildings, with a specific focus on the airflows in the building resulting from natural and mechanical ventilation. You will employ computational fluid dynamics simulations and part of the simulations will be validated using experiments that you will conduct in our atmospheric boundary layer wind tunnel at TU/e.
In this project you will be working on the following two main aspects of the NudgeFlow idea:
- Enhance the physical understanding of the effect of infiltration flows and unsteady pressure differences on indoor airflows in residential building with a NudgeFlow system.
- Establish a modeling approach in CFD for airflows, temperatures and concentrations in and around NudgeFlow buildings, including airflows through cracks and the effect of opening windows and doors.
The project will take place in the
Building Physics research group, under supervision of dr.ir. Twan van Hooff (associate professor with specialization in building ventilation flows) and dr.ir. Stefanie Gillmeier (assistant professor with specialization in experimental wind engineering). The project has links with other past and ongoing projects within the research group. The Building Physics research group is one of the six research groups in the Unit Building Physics and Services of the Department of the Built Environment.