Ramin, HadiKrishnan, Easwaran KGurubalan, ASimonson, Carey J2023-08-152023-08-152021-12Hadi Ramin, Easwaran N. Krishnan, A. Gurubalan & Carey J. Simonson (2022) A transient numerical model for desiccant-coated fixed-bed regenerators and compensation for transient sensor errors, Science and Technology for the Built Environment, 28:3, 422-442, DOI: 10.1080/23744731.2021.2017236https://hdl.handle.net/10388/14881This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Science and Technology for Build Environment on 06-January 2022, available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/23744731.2021.2017236Desiccant-coated fixed-bed regenerators (FBRs) can achieve high effectiveness due to high ratio of energy transfer area to volume, and therefore, they are favourable air-to-air energy recovery exchangers for HVAC systems. However, unlike other types of energy recovery exchangers, the air properties (i.e., temperature and humidity) at the outlet of FBRs vary with time. The variations in outlet airflow properties can cause errors in measurements because the measurements include the FBR and sensors transient responses. In this paper, a numerical model is developed to evaluate the performance of desiccant-coated FBRs and their transient operation. The model consists of an exchanger model (FBR model) and sensor (temperature and humidity) models to distinguish the actual performance of the FBR alone from the measured performance, which includes both the FBR and the sensor's response. The model is validated with experimental measurements and available results in the literature. The model can decouple the measured response of the FBR and sensors to predict the FBR performance. This paper's main contribution is an insight into the complex heat and mass transfer processes in desiccant-coated FBRs and measurement sensors. The results of this paper could be used to provide practical recommendations for humidity measurements of different types of desiccant-coated FBRs developed for HVAC applications. Furthermore, the measurement requirements in the current testing standards (ASHRAE 84 and CSA C439-18 standards) for FBRs are examined. Recommendations from this paper could be implemented in future versions of these standards.enDesiccant-coated fixed-bed regenerators (FBRs)Humidity measurementPerformance evaluationsSensor transient responseTest standards (ASHRAE standard 84 and CSA C439-18 standard)Air-to-air energy exchangersA transient numerical model for desiccant-coated fixed-bed regenerators and compensation for transient sensor errorsArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1080/23744731.2021.2017236