Darryl Dickerhoff is a Principal Research Associate at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and has studied energy use in building since 1980. His emphasis has been in developing measurement techniques related to air flow including: infiltration, ventilation and air leakage of the envelope and thermal distribution systems of both residential and commercial buildings. He is a collaborator with UC Berkeley’s Center for the Built Environment, CBE, where he researches issues related to underfloor ventilation systems. He has extensive experience in field measurements of the energy use in buildings. He is an expert in the use of tracer gases and has developed one of the few multiple tracer gas systems.
This publications database is an ongoing project, and not all Division publications are represented here yet.
Publications
2009
2008
Wray, Craig P., Max H. Sherman, Iain S. Walker, Darryl J. Dickerhoff, and Clifford C. Federspiel. Heating, Ventilating, and Air-Conditioning: Recent Advances in Diagnostics and Controls to Improve Air-Handling System Performance In
American Institute of Physics, AIP Conference Proceedings 1044. Physics of Sustainable Energy- Using Energy Efficiently and Producing it Renewably. Berkeley, CA: Melville, New York, 2008.
2007
Bauman, Fred S., Thomas L. Webster, Hui Jin, Wolfgang Lukaschek, Corinne Benedek, Edward A. Arens, Paul F. Linden, Anna Lui, Walter F. Buhl, and Darryl J. Dickerhoff. ENERGY PERFORMANCE OF UNDERFLOOR AIR DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS. California Energy Commission - Public Interest Energy Research Program, 2007.
Bauman, Fred S., Thomas L. Webster, Hui Jin, Wolfgang Lukaschek, Corinne Benedek, Edward A. Arens, Paul F. Linden, Anna Lui, Walter F. Buhl, and Darryl J. Dickerhoff. Energy Performance of Underfloor Air Distribution Systems In
California Energy Commission, PIER Building End-Use Energy Efficiency Program., 2007.