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Bibliographic database Airbase

AIRBASE is the Bibliographic Database of the AIVC.

It contains publications and abstracts of articles related to energy efficient ventilation. Where possible, sufficient detail is supplied in the bibliographic details for users to trace and order the material via their own libraries. Topics include: ventilation strategies, design and retrofit methods, calculation techniques, standards and regulations, measurement methods, indoor air quality and energy implications etc.

Entries are based on articles and reports published in journals, internal publications and research reports, produced both by university departments and by building research institutions throughout the world. AIRBASE has grown and evolved over many years (1979 to present day, over 22000 references and 16000 documents available online). For most of the references, the full document is also available online.

Access to the publications is free of charge.

Unlike cold climate regions, where natural ventilation is not preferred during winter, natural ventilation is always preferred in Hong Kong for cooling because of the subtropical climate.

C.F. Gao and W.L. Lee

To clarify the indoor climate in Japanese college classrooms, an air-conditioned, mechanically ventilated classroom of a university was surveyed.

Shuzhao Liu, Hiroshi Yoshino and Akashi Mochida

Annex 5 – the Air Infiltration and Ventilation Centre annual report 2011.

AIVC

Office buildings in Chile show higher cooling than heating energy demand.

Waldo Bustamante, Felipe Encinas and Francisco Sánchez de la Flor

There are often practical limitations to measure the airtightness of a multifamily building as a whole as described in EN 13829.

Bassam Moujalled, Fabrice Richieri, Rémi Carrié, and Andrés Litvak

Accidental releases occurring in industrial platforms or during transportation of hazardous materials can entail the dispersion of toxic gas clouds.

Gaëlle Guyot, Olivier Gentilhomme, Rémi Carrié

The airtightness of inclined roofs is important in order to avoid hygrothermal problems and to guarantee the durability of the construction itself.

Paul Steskens, Filip Dobbels, Xavier Loncour, Gilles Flamant

This paper presents some first approaches for the national application of the nearly zero-energy building definition according to the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive by summarising t

Heike Erhorn-Kluttig, Hans Erhorn, Kirsten Engelund Thomsen, and Ulrich Nyffenegger
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