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Building Science

Who Knew the Stack Effect Could Be So Controversial?

Heat rises, and so does warm air

Let's quit arguing about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin or the difference between warm air rising and being pushed by cold air.
Image Credit: by o5com from flickr.com, used under a Creative Commons license

Recently, I wrote a little article about the stack effect to explain that the flow of air and heat is upward in winter but downward in summer. Turns out, the stack effect is a hot topic. That article has gotten 25 comments so far. When I posted it to the RESNET BPI group on LinkedIn, it got another 22 comments. And John Brooks started a stack effect discussion here at Green Building Advisor that has 61 comments as I write. Based on all this discussion, I’d say that heat does rise!

Heat rises

My response is: Relax and repeat after me: Heat rises. Let’s say it again, just to help you get over your phobia: Heat rises. What is it about that statement that’s wrong? Nothing! It doesn’t ascribe a cause. It doesn’t say the only thing heat can do is rise. It’s just stating an observation. Heat can move upward. It also can move downward, sideways, diagonally, or any direction at all.

In the winter stack effect, heat rises because it’s moving with the warm air that’s less dense than the colder surrounding air. In summer, it moves downward as it follows the cool, dense air. I described all this in the previous article. I also stated clearly at the top of the article that it’s the Second Law of Thermodynamics that drives heat flow, and that law says that the natural flow of heat is from hot to cold.

Yes, it’s true that a lot of people are confused about the nature of heat flow. It’s also true that many in the home performance community are quick to point out that, No, heat doesn’t rise – warm air does. Well, if the warm air is rising, isn’t the dang heat rising, too?

Warm air also rises

The other argument against my explanation was that not only does heat not rise but warm air doesn’t rise either. Nope. It gets pushed up by the cold air below, some say. Bud Poll and I exchanged several comments, and he commented in the Green Building Advisor thread as well. His main beef is with the use of certain words to describe the process:

Avoid the words “pull” and “replacement” in conjunction with warm air moving up.

Here’s old and new for stack effect (up north).

Old: Warm air rises inside our home and moves up and out those leaks in the upper portions of the building while pulling in its replacement air through leaks in the lower areas.

New: Cold air pushes into the lower portions of our homes forcing the lighter warm air up and out through leaks at the top.

As it turns out, a couple of other physics principles shed some light on what’s going on here. First, there’s Newton’s Third Law of Motion, which states: For every action, there’s an equal and opposite reaction. Then, another aspect of the Second Law of Thermodynamics says that air moves from high pressure to low pressure. The cold air and the warm air, in other words, work in concert with each other. Each does its thing because of the assistance of the other.

In the end, I agree with Martin Holladay, who said of Poll’s mission to change the way we talk about stack effect, “I’m skeptical that your new method of explanation gets us any closer to clarity and understanding.”

Rather than arguing about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin, let’s focus on what’s important and try to help folks like the Hartfords in Maine, who had to resort to asking the fuel oil company to take their car in exchange for another tank of fuel oil.

If you agree, repeat after me, Heat rises. (Just don’t forget that it can fall and go sideways, too.) If you don’t agree, I’ll see you at Building Science Fight Club.

Allison Bailes of Decatur, Georgia, is a RESNET-accredited energy consultant, trainer, and the author of the Energy Vanguard blog.

58 Comments

  1. homedesign | | #1

    Discussion is Good
    Julius Sumner Miller is Not-So-Silly

    JSM: "What happens is that the less dense air is pushed up by the colder air"

    Allison, why do YOU think Julius Sumner Miller would say such a thing?

  2. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #2

    Response to John Brooks
    I'd say that's pretty much correct, John. On one level, the physics is pretty simple. If something accelerates upward and rises against the force of gravity, there's a force pushing it upward. What I have a problem with is someone saying that warm air (or heat) doesn't rise when it clearly does.

  3. user-943732 | | #3

    I agree with Martin (and Allison)
    I really see it as two sides of the same coin. The only shortcoming in saying that hot air rises is perhaps omitting the fact that cold air falls (if that isn't obvious from the first statement). I think these two statements provide a pretty good explanation.

    An analogy I might use is two people of the same weight on a see-saw each holding a 10 pound bar bell. Then one of them drops their bar bell and so they go up and the other person goes down. Now what caused them to go up? Well, technically it's because the other side of the see saw is now heavier and so gravity pulled that side down which pushed up the lighter side. But it's also true to say that their side of the see saw got lighter from dropping the bar bell so they caused the see saw to go up. To extend the analogy, dropping the bar bell is heating up the air in the house and the fulcrum of the see saw is the neutral pressure plane.

  4. homedesign | | #4

    an interesting subject
    Michael, thanks for your comments
    I always find your perspective to be very interesting and helpful
    I especially liked some of your answers for Lucas Durand in this GBA blog:
    https://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/blogs/dept/musings/questions-and-answers-about-air-barriers

    I think you have an exceptional understanding of Air movement and 3d networks

    and Kudos to Lucas Durand for asking some very interesting questions

  5. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #5

    Love that analagoy!
    I love that analogy, Michael, and will use it in the future when explaining this. Thanks!

    Your analogy just reminded me a little of another bit of physics. Some people who've had an introductory physics course love to go out and correct anyone who uses the term 'centrifugal force.' (Yes, I was one of those people many years ago.)

    "No, no, no," they say, "there's no such thing. You mean centripetal force. Centrifugal force is nothing more than inertia."

    Those who go further and take an intermediate mechanics class find out that physicists do actually use centrifugal force in calculations. Sure, it's referred to as a fictitious force, but it has some utility in solving problems.

  6. homedesign | | #6

    Another Michael Blasnik Insight
    I recently clipped this snipit from another forum...
    I found it to be very helpful

  7. KHWillets | | #7

    Along those lines
    Suction doesn't exist.

    Wikipedia has a fairly easy-to-read page on the stack effect.

  8. homedesign | | #8

    Concerning Suction
    Kendall... Julius Sumner Miller makes the same point in this video
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fy4TLMNb6s
    JSM: "and I must advise you... to put the word Suction... out of your vocabulary...It is UNACCEPTABLE!"

    But of course he is being a word policeman
    not that there's anything wrong with that

  9. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #9

    Word Police
    Kendall & John, suction is like centrifugal force. It misleads if you don't understand that the force is really coming from the other direction. As long as you understand the nature of the forces, though... Oh, wait. I'm not going down that path with yet another concept. Not here anyway. ;~)

  10. user-998246 | | #10

    That force is called buoyancy.
    and density, temperature, and pressure all play a role in creating buoyant flows. almost all of the discussion above is just a simplification of these phenomena. hot air rises (relative to cooler air), heat naturally tends to flow from hot to cold, etc. A practical discussion of this topic is probably warranted since some of these flows are unlikely or easily disrupted in building construction especially if paths are obstructed, pressure and elevation differentials are small, or exterior or ambient conditions are too similar. Bottom line, it can be quite difficult to get the theoretical flows you expect in a house.

  11. user-998246 | | #11

    Clarification
    Consider entrainment instead of suction for terminology.

  12. wjrobinson | | #12

    I too am a fan of word
    I too am a fan of the word buoyancy in regard to fluid dynamics.

  13. Expert Member
    Dana Dorsett | | #13

    Focusing on the plight of the Hartfords in Maine...
    There's never a subsidy for changing fuels, but rare is the market in the lower 48 of the US where in addition to nailing down all the low-hanging fruit of air sealing & spot insulation, putting in a decent mini-split heat pump isn't going to be cost-effective relative to heating with oil, and relegating the oil-burner as backup, or to meet the design-condition peak loads. At 15-17cent/kwh electricity and a climate cold enough that the mid-winter average COP of the mini-split is only 2 (in most places it would be higher) heating with a mini-split would be well into double-digit dollar savings over $3.50 oil, and at $4 oil it's approaching a 40% discount.

    The mean January temp in Dixville ME where they live is roughly +19F, a temperature at which better mini-splits have a COP of about 2.5, so their seasonal average out of the thing would likely be 2.5 or slightly better, even if it's only pulling 1.5 when it's 0F outside (a temp at which point kicking on the oil burner wouldn't be so dramatically more expensive, and may even be necessary.) During the shoulder seasons in ME when the average outdoor temps are 40+ a mini-split would have a COP of more than 3.5. A 1.5-2 ton mini-split is ~$4- $5K installed, and could probably provide more than 80% of the annual heating for them. If it's displacing even 500 gallons of $3.90 oil use a year, replacing it with a in increased power bill at roughly half the cost, it doesn't take a net-present-value analysis to figure out if it's cost-effective. Sub 5-year paybacks are typical (it could be sub-3 years if oil prices continue to climb.)

    And if oil falls to $2 again they could adjust their mini-split use accordingly.

  14. homedesign | | #14

    Here to Learn
    Here is a John Straube quote from BSC BSD-014
    "The air within a building during the wintertime acts like
    a bubble of hot air in a sea of cold air."
    Allison, If I take a drinking glass...turn it upside down and carefully push it underwater...
    Is it fair to say that the interface at the bottom of the glass between the water and air is a neutral pressure plane?

  15. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #15

    Response to John Brooks
    Indeed, John, it must be. If there were any unbalanced pressure there, things would still be moving. If the system is in equilibrium, the forces and pressures are balanced. In that paper by Straube, which I believe is pretty much the same as what he wrote in his textbook, Building Science for Building Enclosures, he discusses houses, where the interface is air-to-air, and the same thing happens.

    When the house is perfectly sealed at the top and open at the bottom (the inverted cup), the neutral pressure plane is at the bottom. When it's perfectly sealed at the bottom and open at the top, the neutral pressure plane is at the top. In both cases, there's no flow because the pressures are balanced at the only leakage pathway. Put a hole in the side or sealed end, and then the air starts flowing.

  16. homedesign | | #16

    Analogy
    If I push the upright bottle underwater....
    Is this a good analogy for an imaginary house (heated in winter) with only one open door at the bottom?

    see attached photo

  17. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #17

    Response to Garth Hood
    "The important thing is the clear promotion of basic building science principles..." That's exactly what I'm after, too! When people say that heat does NOT rise, they're wrong. As you say, heat travels in all directions, and upward is one of them.

    Now, on another issue you raised, I'd say insulating under a slab is not important unless you're in climate zone 5 or higher or have radiant heat embedded in the slab. Most of the heat loss happens at the perimeter, and that's where the insulation needs to be.

  18. GBA Editor
    Martin Holladay | | #18

    Response to John Brook
    John,
    Any analogy comparing a plastic soda bottle to a house is likely to be misleading, because a plastic soda bottle is airtight. Houses aren't airtight, which is why we measure airtightness with a blower door -- to determine a home's air leakage rate.

    I suppose you can use a soda bottle for your future analogies, as long as you first take a red-hot paper clip and poke one thousand holes in the side of the soda bottle.

  19. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #19

    I agree with Martin...
    John, you have to be careful with analogies because it's easy to take them too far and then you have to add all kinds of qualifying statements. Even with the red-hot paper clip, the analogy still doesn't hold up because in your example, the fluids are air and water, nor have you added a heater to your little plastic water bottle.

  20. thoughtful | | #20

    Followup to Allison A. Bailes
    I live in a cold climate so I won't disagree with your comment regarding sub-slab insulation as pertains to heat loss. I do have concerns that an un-insulated slab might still have issues with condensation in humid conditions.

    In any case I am a believer in performance modelling and testing. Sophisticated heat loss/gain software can accurately show where insulation is and isn't needed within the building envelope.

  21. thoughtful | | #21

    "Heat Rises" is Misleading
    "Heat rises, heat rises, heat rises! Oh and by the way heat also travels in every other direction as well!"

    I believe a statement like this can be very misleading.

    I was taught that heat, in general, moves from hot to cold (and technically not the other way as heat has energy and cold does not). Temperatures are always trying to equalize and we can reduce heat loss but not eliminate it.

    It is not a particularly complicated process but it can be confusing when one person is saying that heat rises and another is saying that it doesn't. I'm in the "heat travels in every direction but hot air rises" camp. You can add to that, if you want, that hot air steals heat from the building as the air escapes through holes in the building envelope. We can also get into a further discussion of heat movement by radiation, conduction and convection. All of which all refer to heat but only the latter has anything rising.

    The important thing is the clear promotion of basic building science principles so an average person can, for example, understand the importance of air sealing and insulating under a slab. And why in a well sealed house insulation needs to be added to the structure in a balanced way - and not R60 in the attic but nothing under the slab because "heat rises" - which is old school teaching.

    Just my two cents worth...

  22. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #22

    Response to Garth Hood
    Hear, hear! We do a lot of energy modeling here, and I couldn't agree more.

    On the topic of condensation on slabs in warmer climates, mostly I see that in carports. If it's happening inside a house, it's usually a basement, and the best way to deal with that is by adjusting the dew point of the air downward.

  23. homedesign | | #23

    Variation of Bud Poll's Illustration (in French)
    Allison.. I am just trying to learn here.
    this is my attempt at a hybrid drawing of Straube's Cylinder and Bud Poll's "Worksheet"
    I am trying to learn by doing(and making mistakes)...... so please correct my math, units and concept if I am on the wrong track

  24. user-1091688 | | #24

    Delta pressure illustration
    Hi John,
    Your math is correct and you are trying to show the potential pressure difference between two columns of air 10 meters high with one near 0° C and the other near room temperature, 21°C, your numbers are of course in Kelvin. What the equation gives you is the potential pressure difference. It is your drawing that will place that difference at the top of the warm air column as the bottom is open and thus zero pressure difference.

    The 0, 5, 10 on the outside are not explained and there should probably be only one 10 pa indication on the inside at the top and it should be negative. My decision to include the barometric pressures I felt was necessary to complete the explanation illustrating how the negative 10 pa pressure comes about and to provide a reference for the stacking effect of the different columns of air. If you want to reference your drawing to Straube's, then show a positive 10 pa on the outside.

    Bud

  25. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #25

    Response to John Brooks
    John, you're definitely on the right track, but as Bud pointed out, you seem to have put the pressures on your diagram incorrectly. If you reference to outside pressure, calling that 0, the air at the bottom of your cylinder would be 0 Pa. As you rise inside the tube the pressure relative to outside rises and becomes positive. At the top, it would be the 9.93 Pa you calculated and would be positive (not negative), so the air inside the cylinder would be pushing harder on the walls and ceiling than the air outside. Put a hole there, and the air leaks out at the top. That results in the air below it moving up and cold outside air coming in at the open bottom.

    Of course, this is very simplistic model and real houses have a lot more complexity, but it illustrates how the stack effect works. I like Straube's extension of the cylinder illustration with another one open at the top, then one open at top and bottom, and then the open top & bottom cylinder being heated around the middle.

  26. homedesign | | #26

    I think I see the confusion
    My 0,5,10 numbers on the outside of the cylinder are meant to indicate the barometric pressure OUTSIDE....
    I think I should have spaced the labels further from the cylinder

    The numbers Inside the tube are meant to indicate the absolute INSIDE barometric pressure.

    does that make more sense?

    If and when I get this Illustration right I was planning to "open" both ends and to work on other variations.

  27. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #27

    Response to John Brooks
    Since barometric pressure changes about 3.4 Pa per foot of height (increasing downward), your numbers outside should be 0 at the top and about 110 Pa at the bottom, John.

    Also, if you use that formula from Straube's book, you're not getting absolute (barometric) pressure inside. It gives you the Δp between inside and out.

  28. homedesign | | #28

    I don't mind making mistakes
    I will chew on the feedback ....
    I appreciate your help

  29. wjrobinson | | #29

    Aeronautical engineering...
    Aeronautical engineering... many moons ago... still have my fluid dynamics text books... somewhere.

    Wow... much more fun to fly and build homes and planes now verses those courses! Back to addition and subtraction these days... Diffy Q and all... have at if Brooks.

    We harness all the hot air generated at this site and we could build a "hot air stack elevator" to the moon. Send me first. But first an IPA awaits my attention.

  30. user-1091688 | | #30

    Correction
    Allison,
    You are correct. I'm not used to Straube's diagrams and it looks like his arrows don't agree, but the answer is obvious and I should not have been confused.
    Thanks,
    Bud

  31. 5C8rvfuWev | | #31

    from the peanut gallery
    this has been one of the best recent discussions on GBA for the likes of me. Being able to follow along on the math has made it so I feel like I'm getting more than a rote grasp of what's going on for the first time. Much appreciated.

  32. homedesign | | #32

    Adapting Bud Poll's Illustration... 2nd Attempt
    Ok, I think I see where I went wrong.
    I think I was much "closer" last Sunday when I posted an in-progress illustration at Home Energy Pros
    http://homeenergypros.lbl.gov/forum/topics/the-science-of-hot-air-rising?x=1&id=6069565%3ATopic%3A68805&page=6#comments

    In my attempt to create a "French" version of Bud Poll's worksheet....
    I got confused...and...
    I lost sight of what was going on "outside" ...
    (and the OUTSIDE is a major influence here)

    Let me try this again in "English"

  33. user-757117 | | #33

    ...
    John,
    Your illustration reminds me a little of a hot water tank - but with a hole in the bottom.
    Or rather, a large solar storage tank.

  34. user-1091688 | | #34

    Picture Is Getting Clearer
    Great illustration John and thanks for catching my errors.

    It amazes me how much of a role barometric pressure plays in our residential energy setting and yet it is a pressure we cannot see with our manometers and one that is rarely mentioned in our training, at least not in this simple manner.

    Bud

  35. homedesign | | #35

    "Connected" to the Atmosphere
    Bud,
    I am only attempting to adapt and learn from your example
    As far as I know you are the only one who included the "weight" of the atmosphere(ocean of air) in your illustrations...and labeled the "stacks" side by side

    I think I had my first Atmosphere "Aha" while watching Julius Sumner Miller Videos.

    I also had an "Aha" when I read a recent comment by Colin Genge (Retrotec founder)
    Colin: "Atmospheric pressure adjusts inside and out almost instantaneously even for a tight house. It would be in the order of a few seconds at most."

  36. user-1091688 | | #36

    NPP Response
    Good catch John, that rapid response is part of what I was missing in the transition to leakage above and below with a neutral pressure plane (NPP) somewhere in the middle. One of the details that becomes evident with this approach is that the stack effect pressures are there independent of the leakage. A tight house has the same stack effect pressures working on it as a leaky one, assuming the same height. But the location of that NPP in a tight house could swing rapidly with inside activities, windows, doors, and exhaust appliances. And when it moves, the pressures adjust accordingly.

    Interesting
    Bud

  37. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #37

    Barometric pressure, Pascal's Principle...
    Bud, why do you think barometric pressure plays a role in residential energy use? It's the same inside and out. The pressure differences induced by wind, the stack effect, and mechanical systems are what matter.

    John, that very fast transmission of pressure in fluids is called Pascal's Principle. It's why we can turn on a Blower Door and get the reading almost immediately. It's why hydraulic jacks work. And it happens at the speed of sound because it's transmitted exactly the same way.

  38. homedesign | | #38

    Physics 101
    Allison, I never went beyond Physics 101 in school
    I appreciate your experience and your explanations....this is what is cool about the internet

    I apologize for getting too geeky sometimes...but this stuff fascinates me

    I don't want to go to the Fight Club ... I want to talk about Building Physics

  39. user-1091688 | | #39

    Barometric pressures
    Hi Allison, You said " Bud, why do you think barometric pressure plays a role in residential energy use? It's the same inside and out."
    But it's not. That is what the diagram John and I have been working on is trying to illustrate. The barometric pressure on the inside includes the height of the warm air on the inside and that is sufficiently lighter, that when added to the final few feet of atmosphere we see the pressure difference we can stack effect. Straube's equation even calculates this difference between the inside and outside barometric pressures based upon those last few feet.

    A column of atmosphere commonly ends at sea level with a pressure of 14.7psi or 101325 pa. When we break down the 101325 by feet we get approximately 3.5 pa per foot of elevation (near sea level). In the diagram I used 3.75pa on the outside and about 7% less on the inside because the air is warmer. That results in about 0.25pa less pressure per ft on the inside.

    Flue draft, attic venting, stack effect, and that elusive neutral pressure plane can easily be explained by stacking up the related columns of air.

    Bud

  40. homedesign | | #40

    Easy for you
    Allison, maybe this stuff is easy for you to visualize ....
    Just like some people can visualize in 3D and others really have to work at it
    I have a hard time visualizing stack and convection and nuetral pressure planes...yada,yada

    I think it would be a good thing to design houses in hot & mixed climates that "work" (provide good comfort)with just a couple of mini-split air conditioners

    I think we can all learn something from the Old Guys ...Including Julius Sumner Miller
    and the guys that designed stuff like this
    https://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/community/forum/general-questions/23135/1911-stack-effect-air-circulation

  41. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #41

    Gravity doesn't matter
    Bud, let's take a step back and clarify our terms. Barometric pressure is the absolute pressure we read with a barometer. With no wind, stack effect, or mechanical systems inducing pressure differences, the barometric pressure will increase as you go down from the top of a house to the bottom. It changes about 3.4 Pascals per foot of height.

    A house that is 20' tall will have a barometric pressure at the top that is about 68 Pa lower than the pressure at the bottom. That's more pressure difference than we apply to a home during a Blower Door test (typically 50 Pa in a single point test). Yet why, if the Second Law of Thermodynamics says that air moves from high pressure to low pressure, will the air in the bottom of the house not push its way upward?

    Because of gravity, that's why. That fundamental force of nature completely cancels out the effect of that pressure difference that it created in the first place.

    So again I say the only thing you need to worry about are the relative pressures created by wind, stack effect, and mechanical systems. You're making this more complicated than it really is.

  42. user-1091688 | | #42

    Barometric pressures
    Allison, I do tend to make things more complicated, but it is the process of straightening them out that helps me understand them better. :)
    You said "So again I say the only thing you need to worry about are the relative pressures created by wind, stack effect, and mechanical systems." Leave out the wind and mechanicals for the moment and explain where the pressures come from in stack effect?

    Bud

  43. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #43

    It's temperature...
    Bud, the relative pressures in the stack effect result from temperature differences.

  44. wjrobinson | | #44

    Free copies of "Fluid
    Free copies of "Fluid Dynamics For Dummies" for all.....

    You guys are killing me, but keep going.... Interesting.

    Temperature change, density change, weight change, gravity, free movement....

    A lifesaver ... Due to buoyancy....
    http://abs-airbag.de/us/

  45. jklingel | | #45

    interesting
    I find this interesting. "In summer, it moves downward as it follows the cool, dense air." This seems to cloud the issue if the intent is to educate The Confused. HEAT moves down w/ cooler air? OK, I understand that there is no such thing as "cold", but only less heat/energy relative to something else. Technically, everything has heat until it hits the magic -452 F or whatever it is. But it seems to confuse the issue to say that heat is going down with cooler air. Maybe "less-hot air" is moving down?

  46. user-1091688 | | #46

    Progress
    Allison "Bud, the relative pressures in the stack effect result from temperature differences."

    Correct, and those temperature differences create a weight difference between the column of outside air and the column that passes down through the house. At the height of the thermal envelope both columns would weigh the same, looking up. But, from there down each foot of outside air would add 3.4pa, using your number. On the inside, with a 35° F temp difference (bottom of John's diagram 275°K outside and 294°K inside) we see air that weighs app. 7% less per volume. Thus 3.15pa per foot. In your 20' tall example, those last 20' would add 68pa on the outside and 63pa on the inside, giving us a delta p of 5 Pascals. If we plug 20' (6.1 m) and those two temperatures into Straube's equations we get 5.1pa.

    Paul Morin gave me the American version of that equation,
    Pa. = 0.0067 x H x T
    H = distance from the neutral pressure plane in feet
    T = the Fahrenheit inside and outside temperature difference
    Here we get Pa = 4.7pa, close enough.

    All we are doing is illustrating the way air stacks up at different temperatures to provide us with the pressure differences we see and call stack effect.

    Bud

  47. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #47

    Response to John Klingel
    John, if you read my original article on the stack effect (http://ow.ly/99ONq), you'll find an explanation and a diagram of the stack effect working in reverse in summer. Let's go back to John Straube's quote about the house containing a bubble of warm air in a sea of cold air in winter. Because of the house air being less dense, it can rise.

    In summer, the house is a bubble of more dense air surrounded by less dense air. Holes at the bottom and top of the house will allow the cool, dense air to fall out of the bottom, which then brings the warm, less dense air in at the top.

    Now, houses are complex objects, attics get very hot, and it's certainly possible to get warm air to rise up and out in summer, too. It all depends on the relative densities and pressures.

  48. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #48

    Response to Bud Poll
    Bud, mixing the barometric pressures into your example only confuses what's going on. As I mentioned above, higher pressures at the bottom of a stack due to the weight of all the air above it don't cause the air to move up into the lower pressure area because gravity balances it out. Yes, of course, gravity is involved because of the different densities of cooler and warmer air, but you're better off just dealing with the relative pressures created by those differences and eliminating the absolute pressures from your explanation.

  49. GBA Editor
    Martin Holladay | | #49

    Back where we started
    Allison,
    I'm with you. We're back where we started. As home performance contractors have been saying for years, "A negative pressure of 50 pascals with respect to the outdoors" -- we're comparing the indoor pressure with the outdoor pressure.

    There is no benefit from confusing our explanations with barometric pressures.

  50. jklingel | | #50

    original blog statement
    Allison: Agreed. Sure. "...will allow the cool, dense air to fall out of the bottom, which then brings the warm, less dense air in at the top." I'm not disagreeing w/ the statement in the preceding sentence or the physics. I'm only concerned about the potential confusion that might be generated by this statement in the original blog: "...In summer, it (heat) moves downward..." The cool air is going down, not the heat (as we generally think of it, ie, relative warmth).

  51. user-1091688 | | #51

    More progress
    Allison, if I'm reading your reply correctly, you are not disagreeing with the diagram or the back door approach to understanding where those pressures come from, just that it is a much more complicated explanation than simply dealing with the pressure differences alone. If I'm misreading that please correct.

    You said: "Yes, of course, gravity is involved because of the different densities of cooler and warmer air, but you're better off just dealing with the relative pressures created by those differences and eliminating the absolute pressures from your explanation."

    You also said "As I mentioned above, higher pressures at the bottom of a stack due to the weight of all the air above it don't cause the air to move up into the lower pressure area because gravity balances it out." I agree that this is not an obvious conclusion as we are taught that air would move from a higher pressure to a lower pressure and I'm looking to include an explanation that will account for this. I won't attempt for now as I don't enjoy being the word cop, but your statement is correct.

    Think of this diagram, and there will be several, and the related explanations as, walking those interested through the derivation of an equation, something I'm sure your years of education have required you to do many times. I agree that most often people simply grab an equation and go with it, our heat loss, estimated leakage areas, and many more are examples. But when someone like john or myself knows there are huge barometric pressure changes occurring within the height of a home, we need a source to help us sort them out and that source needs to be easy to understand. My worksheet is still a worksheet, but it will eventually try to contribute to an answer to sorting out the stack effect from the barometric pressures.

    Where this approach may seem unnecessary to you and Martin, that's fine, but it has turned out to be necessary in my discussions with other auditors. Having support from both of you certainly would have made the discussions to come much easier, but at least now I know your objections are more toward keeping it simple rather than getting the numbers correct.

    I worked on the original intercity video conferencing (Picture Phone) back in the 70's. This would have been a great live discussion.

    Bud

  52. homedesign | | #52

    Looks like a storage tank?
    Lucas,
    the crude Illustration reminds me of an empty beer can

    A Ginourmous Empty Beer Can ;---)

  53. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #53

    Response to Bud Poll
    Bud, yes, the numbers on John Brooks's open-bottom diagram seem to be correct. But my objection is not "just that it is a much more complicated explanation than simply dealing with the pressure differences alone." It's not the complexity that bothers me; it's the irrelevance of the barometric pressures creating the extra complexity.

    Regarding the gravitational force balancing out the barometric pressure differences due to height, you said, "I agree that this is not an obvious conclusion as we are taught that air would move from a higher pressure to a lower pressure and I'm looking to include an explanation that will account for this. I won't attempt for now as I don't enjoy being the word cop, but your statement is correct."

    It's not a matter of being a word cop. Balancing forces for systems in equilibrium is one of the first thing that introductory physics students learn. I'm not trying to be patronizing here. Just pointing out how physics works.

    You said, "...there are huge barometric pressure changes occurring within the height of a home, we need a source to help us sort them out and that source needs to be easy to understand. My worksheet is still a worksheet, but it will eventually try to contribute to an answer to sorting out the stack effect from the barometric pressures."

    The easiest way to "sort them out" is simply not to introduce the barometric pressure here at all.

    I'm sorry to keep coming back at you like this, Bud, but you seem to be trying to solve a problem that doesn't exist.

  54. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #54

    A ginormous beer can...
    John B., that's one big Bud! (Of the weiser variety, not the Poll variety.)

  55. user-741168 | | #55

    Coming late to the party
    I teach this stuff, and it's illuminating to watch an iterative process of learning underway.

    John Straube's image of warm air being a lighter bubble in a sea of denser cold air is one I use as well. Warm air does sort of bubble out of a chimney. I was a bit disturbed about the insistence that Heat Rises (and also falls, and moves sideways). Reword that to Heat Falls (and also rises) to see how unhelpful it is.

    OK, for all those who feel like you now have it, you understand buoyancy, you passed the test, here's the next exam question: Water vapor has a lower molecular weight than "air" (in quotes because air's a mixture). So we might expect some stratification of water vapor. Suppose a tall interior space is at uniform temperature, undisturbed by air flows. How does the RH change from low in the space to high in the space, at equilibrium, or doesn't it?

    I know. The party's over.

  56. user-1091688 | | #56

    That can is my namesake
    I'm chuckling Allison, because by the time I get my supporting arguments accepted I may have forgotten what the original problems were.

    On topic: If the difference in inside and outside barometric pressures are the source of our stack effect numbers, I disagree that barometric pressure is irrelevant. Now, to be sure we are talking apples and apples, the vertical changes in barometric pressure are basically irrelevant to air movement as those pressures are the forces holding up the air above them. But when one column of air is inside and the other is outside any differences across our thermal envelope are definitely relevant to air movement. And our temperature differences between inside and outside create just such pressure differences.

    ""The easiest way to "sort them out" is simply not to introduce the barometric pressure here at all. "" That's too easy and it doesn't explain the true origin of the pressures which would be helpful, IMO, to many in understanding many forms of air flow. It certainly has helped me, no comment.

    I think the ball is now in my court to demonstrate a need for this better understanding, and I will pursue those initial concerns that brought this all about. The first on the list, and I would enjoy your input, will be debunking the often argued short-circuit concept where gable vents are left in place along with ridge and soffit vents. There are times when closing them off would be advisable, but there are other times when they are a benefit and auditors should know the difference.

    Bud

  57. GBA Editor
    Allison A. Bailes III, PhD | | #57

    Party's over?
    Bill, thanks for lending your perspective to this discussion. As a juggler, when I'm working on solidifying my 5-ball pattern or a new trick, I pay attention to the mistakes I'm making and then overcorrect to bring the pattern back to where it should be.

    My insistence on the 'heat rises' mantra was my attempt to overcorrect for those who like to react with, "No! Heat doesn't rise!" Clearly, my statement doesn't address what's really happening, and I don't use that statement the same way when I'm teaching. It's not wrong; it's just not particularly helpful, as you point out. When someone says that heat doesn't rise, however, they're saying something that's incorrect in their attempt to point people in the right direction. Using the 'heat rises' overcorrection can help to get them on the right path.

    Regarding stratification of water vapor in air, the answer is pretty straightforward (at least in the 'ideal' case), but I'll let others have a crack at it first. I'll be a 'noninteracting' observer for now. Great question though!

  58. homedesign | | #58

    Exam Question
    Hi Bill, Is this an open book exam?
    If so ... I have attached a snipit From BSC Insight-036

    Can you explain what you meant by:
    "The Party's Over" ?

    Also if you had to choose

    A. "Warm Air Rises (Sometimes)"
    B. "What happens is that the less dense air is pushed up by the colder air"
    C. Provide your own words here

    ....

    .....

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