Lesson 1Fundamentals of heat transfer for HVAC loads: sensible vs latent, conduction, convection, radiation, and solar gainsThis lesson reviews heat transfer basics for HVAC loads, distinguishing sensible and latent heat, and describing conduction, convection, radiation, and solar gains as they apply to building envelopes and internal sources.
Sensible versus latent heat definitionsConduction through building assembliesConvection at interior and exterior surfacesLongwave and shortwave radiation effectsSolar gains and their interaction with loadsLesson 2Solar heat gain calculations: orientation, shading factors, glass properties, and use of solar heat gain coefficientsThis lesson covers how solar gains enter through glazing, how orientation and shading change incident radiation, and how glass properties and SHGC values estimate hourly solar cooling loads in tropical areas.
Solar geometry and surface orientationShading devices and shading coefficientsGlass types, coatings, and visible transmittanceUsing SHGC and area to find solar gainsTime-of-day and seasonal solar variationsLesson 3Presenting load calculation worksheets: unit conversions, consistent units (IP), and step-by-step example structureThis lesson describes organizing and presenting load worksheets, keeping consistent IP units, doing key conversions, and structuring step-by-step examples so assumptions and results are traceable for local use.
Standard worksheet layout and sectionsConsistent IP units and common pitfallsKey unit conversions for load workDocumenting assumptions and inputsStep-by-step example presentationLesson 4Equipment and plug load calculations: inventorying, duty cycles, diversity factors, and internal heat distributionThis lesson explains estimating equipment and plug loads from connected power, duty cycles, and diversity, and how internal heat splits between sensible and latent parts and distributes among zones.
Identifying equipment and plug inventoriesConnected load, demand, and duty cycleDiversity factors for receptacle loadsSensible versus latent equipment gainsZonal distribution of internal equipment heatLesson 5Ventilation and latent loads: outdoor air sensible and latent contributions, using humidity ratios and psychrometric principlesThis lesson focuses on outdoor air ventilation loads, using humidity ratios and psychrometric properties to separate sensible and latent parts, and shows how code airflow turns into cooling and dehumidification loads.
Ventilation airflow from codes and standardsOutdoor and indoor design conditionsHumidity ratio, enthalpy, and psych chartsSensible versus latent ventilation loadsPreconditioning and energy recovery impactsLesson 6Infiltration and unbalanced ventilation: estimating infiltration rates, impact on latent and sensible loadsThis lesson explains how uncontrolled air leakage and unbalanced ventilation affect sensible and latent loads, methods to estimate infiltration rates, and how stack, wind, and mechanical effects show in calculations.
Drivers of infiltration: wind and stackACH, CFM, and envelope leakage metricsEstimating infiltration for load designSensible and latent load from infiltrationUnbalanced ventilation and pressure effectsLesson 7Latent load estimation and psychrometrics: dew point, specific humidity, calculation of latent heat loads from people, ventilation, and processesThis lesson develops latent load estimation using psychrometrics, covering dew point, specific humidity, and computing latent heat from people, ventilation air, and moisture processes in buildings.
Dew point, humidity ratio, and RHPsychrometric chart navigation basicsLatent gains from occupantsLatent loads from ventilation airProcess moisture sources and dehumidificationLesson 8Load calculation approaches: manual cooling load calculations, heat balance overview, and simplified methodsThis lesson introduces major cooling and heating load calculation approaches, including detailed manual methods, heat balance concepts, and simplified rules, highlighting accuracy, inputs, and typical uses.
Design objectives and required accuracyManual component-by-component methodsHeat balance and radiant-time-series ideasSimplified and rule-of-thumb approachesComparing methods and selecting an approachLesson 9People load calculations: sensible and latent contributions per occupant and per area, using ASHRAE tablesThis lesson details quantifying sensible and latent heat from people using ASHRAE tables, considering activity, clothing, and schedules, and converting to area-based design values for offices.
Metabolic rates and activity categoriesASHRAE tables for sensible and latent gainsOccupancy density and diversity factorsSchedules and peak occupancy selectionConverting per-person to per-area loadsLesson 10Combining loads and safety factors: coincident load summation, diversity, temperature delta selections, and peak load extrapolation from one floor to whole buildingThis lesson shows combining component loads into system design loads, applying diversity and safety factors, selecting temperature deltas, and extrapolating floor results to whole-building peaks.
Coincident versus noncoincident load summationApplying diversity to internal gainsChoosing indoor and outdoor design deltasSafety factors and avoiding oversizingScaling floor loads to whole buildingsLesson 11Envelope heat gains: conduction through walls, roof, windows using UA method and solar heat gain through glazingThis lesson covers envelope heat gains through walls, roofs, and windows using UA method, including temperature differences, solar surfaces, and how conduction and solar gains combine in glazing.
U-values, R-values, and UA calculationsWall and roof conduction with design deltasWindow conduction and frame effectsSolar gains through glazing systemsThermal mass and time lag considerationsLesson 12Lighting load calculations: converting lighting power density to sensible heat, diversity, and control impactsThis lesson explains converting lighting power density and fixture data into sensible heat gains, applying diversity and controls, and accounting for schedules, daylight dimming, and losses.
Lighting power density and fixture dataConverting watts to sensible heat gainsLighting schedules and diversity factorsControls: occupancy and daylight dimmingBallast, driver, and luminaire losses