PERSONAL WORKSPACE AIR SUPPLY AND COMFORT CONDITIONING UNIT
20220003450 · 2022-01-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24F11/77
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F2110/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/56
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F3/0442
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/523
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F13/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/64
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F2120/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/81
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/52
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02B30/70
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
F24F11/77
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/523
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/56
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F11/64
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
In a commercial building, an improved terminal unit achieves individual occupant thermal comfort with optimal cost and energy efficiency through the integration of at least two local thermal comfort components into a single terminal unit along with a communication network that may incorporate additional thermal components and also employs emerging optimization principles to meet individual preferences for the thermal environment in a workspace basis while reducing overall zone or building energy use and operating in accordance with any constraints on the energy grid(s) that serve the buildings. These multiple objectives are met in part through the multi-comfort factor individual workspace control and a robust communication network that to coordinate thermal conditioning with neighboring workspaces.
Claims
1. A terminal unit for installation over a workspace in a building, comprising: a generally rigid housing defining an interior volume of the unit; a controller having a processor to execute stored instructions, the controller mounted in or coupled to the unit; an inlet port for connection to a variable air volume (VAV) system to receive primary conditioned air flow into the unit; an adjustable damper arranged to regulate flow of primary conditioned air through the unit; an electronic damper actuator arranged for positioning the damper under control of the controller; a sensor array coupled to the controller, the sensor array including a local space air temperature sensor to indicate a current air temperature in the workspace and a radiant sensor to provide an indication of a current radiant condition in the workspace; a room air inlet arranged to receive room air from the workspace into the unit; an internal fan arranged to mix room air with the primary conditioned air in the unit and provide controllable air movement into the workspace; an electric motor arranged to drive the internal fan under control of the controller; and at least one outlet vent to discharge the mixed room and primary conditioned air from the unit into the workspace; wherein the controller is arranged to execute instructions to determine a. current thermal comfort value of the workspace based on multiple factors including but not limited to workspace air temperature.
2. The terminal unit of claim I wherein the controller further executes instructions to— adjust at least one of the damper position and the internal fan speed, based on comparing the current thermal comfort value of the workspace to a thermal comfort setting input to a user interface, wherein the damper position is adjusted by controlling the electronic damper actuator and the internal fan speed is adjusted by controlling the electric motor.
3. The terminal unit of claim I wherein determining a current thermal comfort value of the workspace is based on multiple factors including at least the fan speed, the workspace air temperature, and the workspace current radiant condition.
4. The terminal unit of claim 1 wherein the radiant sensor monitors multiple points within the workspace below and the controller is arranged to employ data from the radiant sensor and execute instructions to determine current occupancy status and location occupant(s) within the workspace.
5. The terminal unit of claim 4 wherein the controller is arranged to employ data regarding occupant location within the space below to execute instructions to automatically actuate movable outlet vent vanes to direct the mixed primary and room air in accordance with the determined occupancy location.
6. The terminal unit of claim 2 wherein the controller further executes instructions to—immediately adjust the fan speed responsive to a change in a thermal comfort level setting input to a user interface, and then calculate and over time readjust the thermal comfort components available to the workspace to best meet and maintain the thermal comfort setting of the workspace in concert with the thermal comfort settings in neighboring workstations if any to optimize the both the comfort and efficiency of the workstation.
7. The terminal unit of claim 2 wherein the controller further executes instructions to utilize at least one local auxiliary comfort component in combination with the conditioned air supply to the workspace to adjust thermal comfort in the workspace toward preset default comfort values or responsive to an occupant request for adjustment.
8. The terminal unit of claim 2 wherein the terminal unit implements or is coupled to a database arranged to store data associated with neighboring workspace terminal units and any auxiliary thermal comfort components available in the workspace.
9. The terminal unit of claim 2 wherein the controller includes or is coupled to a communications component for wired or wireless electronic communications, including communications with a user device and with any neighboring workspace terminal units.
10. The terminal unit of claim 9 wherein the controller further executes instructions to communicate with a user device using the communications component to receive a thermal comfort setting input to a user interface of the user device, and to send a current thermal comfort value for display on the user interface.
11. The terminal unit of claim 9 wherein the controller communicates with an application program provisioned on the user device, and the application program controls the user interface to display both the thermal comfort setting and the current thermal comfort value of the workspace.
12. The terminal unit of claim 9 and wherein the communications component includes at least one local communication interface for interfacing the controller to a local auxiliary comfort component to control the auxiliary comfort component and to receive status of the auxiliary comfort component.
13. The terminal unit of claim 9 The communications component provides communications between the controller and at least one neighbor personal air supply terminal unit in the same FIVAC, zone to receive data including neighbor workspace occupancy status, neighbor workspace current thermal comfort setting, and current, thermal comfort value to optimize both the thermal comfort and efficiency of the workstations in the zone.
14. A method comprising: detecting a change in occupancy or an occupant request for a change in the local comfort level in a workspace served by an HVAC terminal unit that controls more than a single comfort factor; and in the terminal unit, adjusting at least one of a damper position and an internal fan speed in response to the change in occupancy or local thermal comfort level request.
15. The method of claim 14 and further comprising the steps of: receiving a thermal comfort setting request by a user in the workspace; determining the presence of at least one neighboring workspace served by a second HVAC terminal unit; communicating with the second HVAC terminal unit to acquire current settings and operating data including a current space temperature limitation of the neighboring workspace; evaluating a constraint on space temperature of the workspace based on the current space temperature limitation of the neighboring workspace; calculating an optimized mix of thermal comfort components to achieve the thermal comfort setting with gradual change; and adjusting the comfort components so as to gradually achieve the optimized mix.
16. The method of claim 14 and further comprising: calculating a current thermal comfort value of the workspace, based on multiple factors including at least the terminal unit fan speed, the workspace air temperature, and the workspace current radiant condition; comparing the current thermal comfort value of the workspace to a thermal comfort value setting input to a user interface of a user device associated with the workspace; and adjusting at least one thermal comfort component to move the current thermal comfort value in a direction toward the thermal comfort value setting.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein the adjusting step includes adjusting at least one of a damper position and an internal fan speed of the terminal unit, wherein the damper is arranged to regulate flow of primary conditioned air through the terminal unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0027] To enable the reader to realize one or more of the above-recited and other advantages and features of the present disclosure, a more particular description follows by reference to specific embodiments thereof which are illustrated in the appended drawings. Understanding that these drawings depict only typical embodiments of the disclosure and are not therefore to be considered limiting of its scope, the present disclosure will be described and explained with additional specificity and detail using the accompanying drawings in which:
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0033] Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the inventive concept, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The accompanying drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale. In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth to enable a thorough understanding of the inventive concept. It should be understood, however, that persons having ordinary skill in the art may practice the inventive concept without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, components, circuits, and networks have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the embodiments. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout the various views and drawings. As used herein, the term “and/or” includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. We begin with the following review of the state of the art.
[0034] Typical HVAC systems that operate in commercial buildings supply conditioning to multiple “zones” within the building. In
[0035] Each zone generally encompasses several hundred to a thousand or more square feet of occupied area, and each zone typically serves multiple occupants. Generally, just a single temperature sensor (sometimes referred to as a thermostat) 114 located somewhere in the zone is incorporated to control the source of conditioning to each zone. The zone temperature sensor 114 is coupled to the BAS zone controller 130 by a wired or wireless connection 116. There is very little and often no means for temperature adjustment within each zone to accommodate the different thermal preferences of the multiple occupants that inhabit the zone. Because each zone is independent from adjacent zones, there can also be issues among adjacent zones wherein attempting to maintain different thermal conditions between zones can result in the zones “fighting” each other to maintain different thermal conditions and resulting in additional energy expended without achieving noticeable thermal differences between adjacent zones. For this reason, allowing occupant adjustment of the zone thermostat is discouraged and often not allowed in commercial buildings.
[0036] Where local control is applied, the devices intended to enable individual thermal and lighting level adjustment are generally stand alone and not incorporated into the operation of the overall HVAC system. So, personal comfort devices such as supplemental heaters or temperature-controlled air diffusers because they are not incorporated into the HVAC system, are more likely to increase overall energy use. For example, operating a separate, independently controlled, local heat source such as a portable space heater may warm the air surrounding the temperature sensor that controls airflow to the zone a zone and cause the HVAC system to provide additional cooling to the zone, countering the effect of the local heat source and adding even more energy cost to its operation, and possibly resulting in additional discomfort to other zone occupants.
[0037]
[0038] The portion of conditioned air flow to each smart diffuser 240 may be automatically adjusted with a corresponding damper 242 with actuator in each smart diffuser and is based on the local temperature and local setpoint at each smart diffuser. Airflow from each smart diffuser is directed across ceiling where it mixes with room air to provide indirect conditioning to occupants below. Occupants can change the local air flow by adjusting the temperature setpoint at each smart diffuser, but overall air flow and thus level of conditioning supplied to the zone is commonly established by zone thermostat 214 which is connected to the BAS VAV box controller 230. Local setpoint may be adjusted by wall-mounted interface, wireless connection, etc. The application of smart diffusers is usually able to make zone comfort conditions more uniform throughout at zone, but they are generally not effective in providing the variations in the thermal environment between adjacent workstations that may be desired by their occupants.
Thermal Comfort
[0039] Thermal comfort, for typical healthy individuals, is a sense of comfort determined by several factors in the individual's (or user's) environment, mainly the following: First, Space Temperature —this is the temperature in the space (for example, a subzone) that is measured with a common thermometer, which may be integrated into a component such as a terminal unit. This typically is the only means of comfort control in commercial building HVAC systems today.
[0040] The second thermal comfort factor, Mean Radiant Temperature, is the thermal effect of the heat that is radiated from the walls, windows, floor and ceiling in the space of interest. The “mean” radiant temperature is simply the combined effect of all of them (according to known formulae). Where a room has been at a stable temperature for some time, and only interior walls, floors, and ceiling, it is likely that the mean radiant temperature is equal to the space temperature because all these surfaces will have the same temperature as the space. But if, for example, it is cold outside and a user is sitting near a window, they will perceive a cooler thermal condition than the space temperature would indicate, because they are subject to a lower mean radiant temperature. In still air environments, one can approximate the mean radiant and space temperature are about equal in their effect on comfort. For example, if one is seated in a space that has a space temperature of 73F and a mean radiant temperature of 71F, their perception of comfort will be a surrounding temperature of approximately 72F. For purposes of comfort calculations, Space and Mean radiant temperatures can be combined together in a term called “Operative Temperature.” In this example, the operative temperature would be 72F.
[0041] Third, Air Movement—This is the average velocity of the air surrounding a user as they occupy a space. The faster the air is moving around you, the cooler you feel due to the increased rate of conduction of heat from your body by the air movement. A small change in air movement by as little as 20 feet per minute (which is imperceptible to most people) has about a one degree F. change in thermal sensation, i.e., thermal comfort. Finally, Humidity in the range that exists in most commercial buildings has a very small effect on thermal sensation and is not considered here for the purposes of this application. The above factors together determine and describe a current thermal condition of a space. Below, we describe quantifying that condition as a current thermal comfort value.
[0042] Like the smart diffusers and other VAV air distribution devices that constitute prior art, some embodiments of the present disclosure may comprise a ceiling or overhead mounted unit that connects directly to a VAV zone air outlet, either directly to an air handler or through a VAV box as some air diffusers currently do. Also, like some existing art, each “Uniterm” personal workspace air supply unit preferably has the capacity to sense the local space temperature as well as local occupancy and has an integral damper to regulate the flow of primary air through the unit. It also permits the local occupant to request adjustment in the comfort conditions through a personal device such as a smart phone. Control devices may operate over wireless communication links. Each Uniterm unit preferably has the capacity to mix primary air and room air within its housing so that directing conditioning explicitly toward the local occupant is possible.
[0043] However, the present disclosure is directed to a novel Personal Workspace Air Supply and Comfort Conditioning Unit, also referred to as a Uniterm, that also has several features that are new and permit it to maintain substantial differences in the thermal environment between and among individual workstations in open areas. The unit may be arranged to operate some or all energy consuming devices and equipment in the workplace to satisfy occupant requirements, and to engage with each occupant to automatically keep their space at desired comfort levels throughout each workday. And, using both onboard and external logic, the Uniterm network, comprising a cloud-based server and communications capabilities, can also achieve maximum building operating energy efficiency by helping each occupant understand the environmental benefits and consequences of various comfort and operational decisions the occupant may request, and by optimizing the system based on occupant requirements for thermal conditioning. A Uniterm system engages each occupant in responding to power grid constraints for more effective load shedding and flexibility during demand response or partial curtailment events. In a preferred embodiment, a Uniterm system refers to the network serving one or more buildings in which at least some of the workspaces are served by an individual personal workspace air supply unit, a Uniterm, and the individual Uniterm units are connected over a communications network that includes a remote server as described herein.
Personal Local Comfort
[0044] Current art of VAV systems control only zone space temperature as a means for maintaining comfort. Separate devices such as desk based radiant panels or desk or ceiling fans are sometimes added, but these are standalone devices and are rarely integrated into and coordinated in any manner with the VAV system. In addition to clothing and activity levels, human thermal comfort sensation is a function of four external factors; 1) space temperature, 2.) mean radiant temperature. 3) air movement around the individual, and 4) to a far lesser degree within normal ranges, the space humidity. it has been determined that small changes in air movement surrounding individuals has a significant influence on thermal comfort sensation. Using the comfort analysis tool that is employed by ASHRAE to determine compliance with its comfort standard, it can be seen that changes in air movement surrounding an individual of only 20 feet per minute, a change that is almost imperceptible, causes about a 1 Degree F. change in thermal comfort sensation for the individual experiencing that change. With a built-in fan and in some embodiments automatically adjustable air discharge vanes, the Uniterm has the capacity both to mix room air with primary conditioned air internally, and to regulate and direct air movement in and around the workstation it serves. Regulating the flow of primary air allows it to provide some space temperature control and controlling the level of local air movement results in its ability to regulate more than a single comfort parameter. Monitoring and controlling more than a single comfort factor in one unit and integrating this control with a standard building HVAC system is new and is a mainstay of this invention. It allows the Uniterm to provide substantial variances in thermal comfort sensation that may be desired by occupants in adjacent open area workstations because it can adjust different levels of localized air movement in adjacent workstations without causing objectionable drafts or other unsatisfactory environmental conditions.
[0045] Another aspect that is entirely new is the use automatically adjustable vanes to direct the conditioning air to be most effective in the workspace. While automatically adjustable vanes are not new—they are employed in some units to oscillate and spread sir back and forth in an area—this application is new in that can direct both conditioned air and regulated air movement toward the occupant(s). In this embodiment, the radiant temperature and occupancy sensing employs a multi-sensor array that detects the radiant temperature at several points from objects in the space. The same mechanism may detect occupancy by the temperature and the movement through the granular matrix of points within the space that are monitored by the array. This temperature and occupancy detection array has the capacity to detect the location of the occupant(s) in the conditioned space and the adjustable vanes can be employed to direct the conditioning to that specific location. The adjustable vanes are also employed to allow the Uniterm to condition larger multi-occupant spaces such as a conference room by spreading the conditioned air more generally within the conditioned area.
[0046] Though its wireless network, each Uniterm can also engage and control other means of local thermal comfort conditioning such as a workstation based radiant panel or heating device, thermal activated chair, desktop fan, or virtually any other workstation based device that is then automatically incorporated into the response to requests by the local occupant for changes in workstation comfort conditions.
[0047]
Integrated Control of Workspace Equipment
[0048] While products allow control of lights, plugs and other equipment through a wireless phone connection, the Uniterm allows each occupant to manage the control of all the equipment in their workspace through a single preferably wireless connection to the Uniterm. It allows, at the occupant's discretion, individual pieces of equipment to operate subject to occupancy as sensed by the Uniterm, to operate based on the thermal condition of the space, or combined with occupancy, as sensed by the Uniterm (this is most useful for auxiliary occupant thermal conditioning devices), or it allows equipment to operate in accordance with one or more schedules that the occupant can establish, or manually, or some combination of any of the above. Thermal comfort factors that are not directly sensed, such as air movement or a heated chair are incorporated into the thermal comfort assessment of the space through analytics in which the characteristics of the device or system are incorporated into the controls using the specific characteristics of each device. For example, local air movement may be a function of the speed of the fan; the comfort effect of a heated chair may be a function of the power input or a controllable comfort setting. In this way the Uniterm can at continuously or at least frequently assess and control the total comfort environment in which the local occupant(s) inhabit. And it can coordinate to determine the optimal configuration of the various comfort components, and optimize the entire system, including the HVAC system.
Direct Occupant Engagement for Environmental Benefits
[0049] While there is prior art regarding phone apps that provide general guidance to building occupants regarding the environmental consequences for various thermal or equipment operational decisions they may make, embodiments of the present invention may assess the real time requests that the occupant submits at a user interface and can provide guidance regarding cost and environmental consequences before the request is executed.
[0050]
[0051] We use the term “thermal comfort value” as a dimensionless value that is used to label the current combination of thermal comfort factors active in a workspace, and the requested thermal comfort value, In one embodiment of the invention, a color spectrum may be employed in a graphical user interface (in lieu of a number) for the occupant to easily observe what the current space thermal comfort value is and through which to make any desired adjustment.
[0052] Referring again to
[0053] Although the response is immediate and a correction in the thermal comfort level quickly meets the new setting, the system continues to calculate and adjust the thermal comfort components available to best meet the thermal comfort setting of this workspace in concert with the thermal comfort settings in neighboring workstations if any to optimize both the comfort and efficiency of the affected workstation(s). For example, if there are neighboring workstations, a. determination is made through data aggregated from the other workstations, whether decreasing the neighborhood space temperature would benefit all the workstations, and if that would be beneficial for the energy required to operate the entire system. If the determination is that a lower space temperature would be beneficial, then the primary airflow is increased and the space temperature in the workspace (and in the neighboring workstations) is gradually reduced. As the space temperature is reduced in coordination with the space temperature reduction, the fan speed is adjusted to maintain the current thermal comfort setting in the workspace. Similar adjustments preferably are continually made in the neighboring workstations along identical parameters until a new optimum combination of comfort factors throughout the neighborhood is reached. If it is determined that a decrease in space temperature is not beneficial, the system continues to operate as it is until changes in conditions or settings dictate another coordinated adjustment of thermal comfort, components throughout the neighborhood. Using this example and the present disclosure, one knowledgeable in the operation of such systems can easily extend how a Uniterm that is not in a neighborhood, or a Uniterm with auxiliary comfort components, would be programmed to operate to achieve and maintain the requested local comfort setting.
[0054]
[0055] The fundamental logic for the operation of the unit controller to maintain thermal comfort conditions in the workspace is also shown in
[0056] If there has been no occupant request for change then the process reverts to ensuring optimal operation of the unit and system. For this process the unit first checks to see if there are neighbors (522) and if so, what constraints currently exist on space temperature control so as best meet the requested conditions in the entire neighborhood. For example, a change request may have occurred in one of the neighbors that tightens or loosens the space temperature constraint for this unit. In that case, a calculation is made (530) to meet or take advantage of the change in space temperature constraint in order to optimize overall operation. Once the determination of the correct combination and control of comfort components is made, any change, if necessary, is communicated to those components (532) if no change is necessary, the step is skipped and after a short delay, the process loops back to 517.
[0057] A change (517) may also be initiated by a change in occupancy. When the workstation first becomes occupied, in a preferred embodiment, the comfort request is automatically reset to the last occupied value or a default value unless a new request is received. Specifics for this and other operating factors may be determined through an initiating or unit setup routine during installation. When a workstation becomes unoccupied, a setback thermal comfort value is incorporated whose value may depend on the time of day and the period of unoccupancy. At such a time, the unit is essentially shut down so long as the thermal comfort condition is within a specific range of the current occupied thermal comfort setting. Occupancy may be determined in various ways, for example, utilizing the sensor array as described above.
[0058] Some of the features disclosed herein are summarized in the following paragraphs. This list is not intended to be exhaustive: [0059] Personal Workspace Air Supply and Comfort Conditioning Unit with a damper to control the flow of primary conditioned air from the VAV system into the unit AND an internal fan to mix room air with primary conditioned air in the unit and control the flow and movement of air in the space. Sensing devices to determine local space temperature, humidity, and radiant, temperature, and means to analytically calculate local air movement and other local thermal comfort parameters that are not or cannot be otherwise determined. [0060] Personal Workspace Air Supply and Comfort Conditioning Unit that provides individualized thermal comfort control by employing both localized space temperature and localized air movement control to maintain different thermal environments among closely spaced workstations where manipulating only space temperature variations would not be effective. Also, the ability to integrate other local thermal comfort devices into its operation when available and operate them in a coordinated fashion to achieve local thermal comfort conditions as requested by the occupant(s). [0061] Personal Workspace Air Supply and Comfort Conditioning Unit that can detect where occupants are in a workspace area and direct the desired conditioning toward that area.
[0062] Personal Workspace Air Supply and Comfort Conditioning Unit combined with its own separate network that combines conditions and occupant preferences in each zone and then connects and communicates to the BAS to provide control adjustments based the Equal Marginal Performance Principle or other advanced multi-variable algorithmic means of integrating control of HVAC system components to improve the overall system operating efficiency. [0063] A method and system of communication networking in occupied spaces of commercial buildings to interact with occupants and the BAS to inform impacts of current preferences and then adjust for individual preferences for thermal conditions most economically. [0064] A method in which each local individual unit—through its network connection—can be adjusted automatically to reduce energy use in the event of a power demand response signal, and each workstation occupant can override or enhance such local adjustment if needed or allowed. [0065] Occupant can first be informed of cost before an override is carried out such that the occupant may wish to modify degree of override. [0066] Method in which the degree of adjustment on non-overridden units is adjusted iteratively to attain desired power reduction and counteract the override or enhancement action of some other occupants. [0067] A method of control of a VAV box damper wherein the VAV box serves multiple smart air distribution devices each with primary airflow control, wherein the airflow requirement of each device and the position of the damper for each smart diffuser is transmitted over a network and these airflow requirement and damper positions are employed to first calculate a the total airflow to arrive at a target VAV box airflow which is then adjusted within a limited range based on the average damper position and maximum position of one or more dampers in the smart devices served. [0068] A method of control of a VAV box damper wherein the VAV box serves multiple smart diffusers each with primary airflow control, and also serves one or more diffusers without primary airflow control, wherein the airflow and position of the damper for each smart diffuser is transmitted over a network and these positions are employed to calculate an estimated airflow for each smart diffuser which is that totaled to arrive at a target VAV box airflow which is then adjusted for additional flow to account for the flow desired to the diffusers without primary air flow control, [0069] A method in which each occupant can individually turn on or turn off the app that notifies them of the environmental consequences of, and comparisons with targets and others of the various decisions they make regarding the specific thermal level and equipment operations in their workstation they wish to make ahead of executing these actions.
Implementation Hardware and Software
[0070] Most of the equipment discussed above comprises hardware and associated software. For example, the typical electronic device is likely to include one or more processors and software executable on those processors to carry out the operations described. We use the term software herein in its commonly understood sense to refer to programs or routines (subroutines, objects, plug-ins, etc.), as well as data, usable by a machine or processor. As is well known, computer programs generally comprise instructions that are stored in machine-readable or computer-readable storage media. Some embodiments of the present invention may include executable programs or instructions that are stored in machine-readable or computer-readable storage media, such as a digital memory. We do not imply that a “computer” in the conventional sense is required in any particular embodiment. For example, various processors, embedded or otherwise, may be used in equipment such as the components described herein.
[0071] Memory for storing software again is well known. In some embodiments, memory associated with a given processor may be stored in the same physical device as the processor (“on-board” memory); for example, RAM or FLASH memory disposed within an integrated circuit microprocessor or the like. In other examples, the memory comprises an independent device, such as an external disk drive, storage array, or portable FLASH key fob. In such cases, the memory becomes “associated” with the digital processor when the two are operatively coupled together, or in communication with each other, for example by an I/O port, network connection, etc. such that the processor can read a file stored on the memory. Associated memory may be “read only” by design (ROM) or by virtue of permission settings, or not. Other examples include but are not limited to WORM, EPROM, EEPROM, FLASH, etc. Those technologies often are implemented in solid state semiconductor devices. Other memories may comprise moving parts, such as a conventional rotating disk drive. All such memories are “machine readable” or “computer-readable” and may be used to store executable instructions for implementing the functions described herein.
[0072] A “software product” refers to a memory device in which a series of executable instructions are stored in a machine-readable form so that a suitable machine or processor, with appropriate access to the software product, can execute the instructions to carry out a process implemented by the instructions. Software products are sometimes used to distribute software. Any type of machine-readable memory, including without limitation those summarized above, may be used to make a software product. That said, it is also known that software can be distributed via electronic transmission (“download”), in which case there typically will be a corresponding software product at the transmitting end of the transmission, or the receiving end, or both.
[0073] Having described and illustrated the principles of the invention in a preferred embodiment thereof, it should be apparent that the invention may be modified in arrangement and detail without departing from such principles. We claim all modifications and variations coming within the spirit and scope of the following claims.