Particle Simulation and Evaluation of Personal Exposure to Contaminant Sources in an Elevation Space
(2004)
An elevator, which figures a small volume, is normally used by everyone for a short period of time and equipped with simple ventilation system..Any contaminant released within it may cause serious problem. This research adapt a fire and smoke simulation software (FDS) into non-fire indoor airflow scario. Differently from previous research, particles are chosen as a risk evalution unit. A personal and multi-personal exposure model is proposed. The model takes the influence of the human thermal boundary, coughing, inhalation, exhalation, standing position, and the fan factor into account. The model is easy-to-use and suitable for the design of elevator system in practice.
Current building product models explicitly represent components, attributes of components, and relationships between components. These designer-focused product models, however, do not represent many of the design conditions that are important for construction, such as component similarity, uniformity, and penetrations. Current design and construction tools offer limited support for detecting these construction-specific design conditions. This paper describes the ontology we developed using the manufacturing concept of features to represent the design conditions that are important for construction. The feature ontology provides the blueprint for the additions and changes needed to transform a standard product model into a constructionspecific product model. The ontology formalizes three classes of features, defines the attributes and functions of each feature type, and represents the relationships between features explicitly. The descriptive semantics of the ontology allows practitioners to represent their varied preferences for naming features, specifying features that result from component intersections and the similarity of components, and grouping features that affect a specific construction domain. A software prototype that implements the ontology enables practitioners to transform designer-focused product models into feature-based product models that represent the construction perspective.
Die Arbeit beschreibt ein Konzept zur computergestützten, schrittweisen Erfassung und Abbildung der Geometrie von Gebäuden im Kontext der planungsrelevanten Bauaufnahme. Zunächst wird die Bauaufnahme als Erstellung eines verwendungsspezifischen Modells betrachtet. Anschließend wird der Fokus auf das geometrische Abbild gelegt. Es werden u.a. die Aufmaßtechniken Handaufmaß, Tachymetrie und Photogrammetrie bewertet und gebäudetypische geometrische Abstraktionen aufgelistet. Danach erfolgt eine Aufstellung von Anforderungen an ein computergestütztes Aufmaßsystem, welche mit kommerziellen Lösungen aus dem nichtgeodätischen Bereich verglichen wird. Im Hauptteil wird das zu Beginn genannte Konzept beschrieben. Betrachtet wird die skizzenbasierte Erstellung eines nichtmaßlichen geometrischen Abbildes des Gebäudes in den Frühphasen der Bauaufnahme, seine anschließende schrittweise maßliche Anpassung an das Original und topologische Detaillierung im Zuge des Bauaufmaßes, sowie die Extraktion von Bauteilen und ihren geometrischen Parametern. Zur Vereinfachung der maßlichen Anpassung des geometrischen Abbildes im Aufmaßprozeß werden geometrische Abstraktionen wie Parallelitäten, rechte Winkel usw. genutzt, aber nicht erzwungen. Mit Hilfe der Ausgleichungsrechnung erfolgt eine Zusammenführung der geometrischen Abstraktionen und verschiedener Aufmaßtechniken. Es werden die nötigen Beobachtungsgleichungen und andere relevante Aspekte beschrieben. Gezeigt wird weiter ein Konzept, wie ein nutzerseitig veränderbares Bauwerksmodell mit dem geometrischen Abbild in Bezug gebracht werden kann, wobei aus dem geometrischen Abbild geometrische Parameter des nutzerseitig veränderbaren Bauwerkmodells gewonnen werden können. Ausgesuchte Problematiken der Arbeit wurden prototypisch implementiert und getestet. Hierbei stand die Verbindung der Aufmaßtechniken und geometrischen Abstraktionen im Mittelpunkt. Die geometrischen Ansätze der Arbeit beschränken sich auf planare Oberflächen.
Individual views on a building product of people involved in the design process imply different models for planning and calculation. In order to interpret these geometrical, topological and semantical data of a building model we identify a structural component graph, a graph of room faces, a room graph and a relational object graph as aids and we explain algorithms to derive these relations. The application of the technique presented is demonstrated by the analysis and discretization of a sample model in the scope of building energy simulation.
The presented work focuses on the presentation of a discrete event simulator which can be used for automated sequencing and optimization of building processes. The sequencing is based on the commonly used component–activity–resource relations taking structural and process constraints into account. For the optimization a genetic algorithm approach was developed, implemented and successfully applied to several real life steel constructions. In this contribution we discuss the application of the discrete event simulator including its optimization capabilities on a 4D process model of a steel structure of an automobile recycling facility.
Former achievements for integrated information management have concentrated on interoperability of applications like e.g. CAD, structural analysis or facility management, based on product models introducing additional application independent model layers (core models). In the last years it has become clear, that besides interoperability of autonomous applications, the concurrent processes of model instantiation and evolution have to be modeled, including the relationship to available project resources, persons, legal requirements and communication infrastructure. This paper discusses some basic concepts for an emerging methodology relating the fields of product modeling, project management and workflow systems by elaborating the concept of a process model, which gives a decomposition of the project goals into executable activities. Integrated information management systems should be related to process models to detect pending activities, deadlocks and alternatives of execution. According to the heterogeneous nature of project communication processes, a method for dynamic classification of ad-hoc activities is suggested, that complements predefined highlevel process definitions. In a brief outline of the system architecture, we show how sophisticated information management systems can be broadly made available by using conventional Internet technologies.
Many problems related to data integration in AEC can be better tackled by an approach that takes into account the heterogeneity of tasks, models and applications but does not require continuous consistency of the evolving design data, at each data management operation. Such an approach must incorporate adequate services that can facilitate reintegration of concurrently modified data at reasonably selected coordination points. In this paper we present a set of methods which, used in combination, can achieve that goal. After a description of the principal envisaged cooperative work scenario each of these methods is discussed in detail and current observations drawn from their software realisation are given. Whilst the suggested approach is valid for any EXPRESS-based data model, the practical focus of work has been on facilitating IFC-driven integration.