The energetic performance of an integrated energy-recovery system for air-conditioning applications
consisting of an indirect evaporative cooling equipment combined with a cooling/reheating unit is analyzed
numerically using an in-house-developed computer code. Simulations are performed for a wide
variety of operating conditions and main features of the heat exchangers. The minor energy consumption
consequent to the energy transfer from outdoor air to saturated indoor air to be exhausted and,
subsequently, to supply air to be reheated is compared with that deriving from the adoption of traditional
energy recovery strategies, and calculated by introducing a cooling effectiveness parameter. An
empirical dimensionless correlation that expresses the cooling effectiveness parameter as a function of
the several independent variables considered is also proposed