New cool concrete for building envelopes and urban paving: Optics-energy and thermal assessment in dynamic conditions

[Display omitted] Urban Heat Island (UHI) is an acknowledged effect that causes higher temperatures in urban areas compared to the surrounding rural areas. Such urban overheating directly increases buildings’ energy demand for cooling, to reach thermal comfort conditions in the indoor areas. This ph...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy and buildings 2017-09, Vol.151, p.381-392
Hauptverfasser: Rosso, F., Pisello, A.L., Castaldo, V.L., Fabiani, C., Cotana, F., Ferrero, M., Jin, W.
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container_end_page 392
container_issue
container_start_page 381
container_title Energy and buildings
container_volume 151
creator Rosso, F.
Pisello, A.L.
Castaldo, V.L.
Fabiani, C.
Cotana, F.
Ferrero, M.
Jin, W.
description [Display omitted] Urban Heat Island (UHI) is an acknowledged effect that causes higher temperatures in urban areas compared to the surrounding rural areas. Such urban overheating directly increases buildings’ energy demand for cooling, to reach thermal comfort conditions in the indoor areas. This phenomenon increases energy consumption and, consequently, greenhouse gas emissions in the cooling season. Moreover, it seriously threatens citizens’ environmental comfort in urban areas. In this context, the use of cool (high solar reflectance and thermal emittance) materials has been widely acknowledged as a promising passive UHI mitigation solution. However, the application of such cool materials does not comply with the environmental preservation of cultural heritage sites, for architectural reasons. In fact, historical districts, which constitute a large part of European building stock, are often characterized by non-cool, dark colored materials. Therefore, the most common, light-colored cool solutions cannot be applied, since regulations on such protected areas are strict. Indeed, the above-mentioned regulations do not allow the modification of visible parts of the building. In this paper, innovative concrete elements with infrared-reflective (IR) pigments are presented to be used as i) urban paving, ii) building façade elements, and iii) retrofit strategies for walls and pavements in historical buildings. Both in-lab and in-field characterization of the samples are carried out with dynamically varying thermal and radiative forcing. Results indicate that prototypes with IR pigments have higher solar reflectance, up to +15.8% compared to standard concrete prototypes and +12.5% with respect to same color prototypes without high infrared reflective pigments. Moreover, they are able to maintain surface temperatures that are up to −10.6°C lower with respect to non-IR samples. These results confirm that the presented composite material represents a good solution for passive cooling at building and inter-building scale.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.enbuild.2017.06.051
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Such urban overheating directly increases buildings’ energy demand for cooling, to reach thermal comfort conditions in the indoor areas. This phenomenon increases energy consumption and, consequently, greenhouse gas emissions in the cooling season. Moreover, it seriously threatens citizens’ environmental comfort in urban areas. In this context, the use of cool (high solar reflectance and thermal emittance) materials has been widely acknowledged as a promising passive UHI mitigation solution. However, the application of such cool materials does not comply with the environmental preservation of cultural heritage sites, for architectural reasons. In fact, historical districts, which constitute a large part of European building stock, are often characterized by non-cool, dark colored materials. Therefore, the most common, light-colored cool solutions cannot be applied, since regulations on such protected areas are strict. Indeed, the above-mentioned regulations do not allow the modification of visible parts of the building. In this paper, innovative concrete elements with infrared-reflective (IR) pigments are presented to be used as i) urban paving, ii) building façade elements, and iii) retrofit strategies for walls and pavements in historical buildings. Both in-lab and in-field characterization of the samples are carried out with dynamically varying thermal and radiative forcing. Results indicate that prototypes with IR pigments have higher solar reflectance, up to +15.8% compared to standard concrete prototypes and +12.5% with respect to same color prototypes without high infrared reflective pigments. Moreover, they are able to maintain surface temperatures that are up to −10.6°C lower with respect to non-IR samples. 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1872-6178
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Building envelopes
Composite materials
Concrete
Concrete construction
Cool concrete
Cool materials
Cooling
Cultural resources
Emittance
Energy consumption
Energy demand
Environmental simulation chamber
Greenhouse effect
Greenhouse gases
Historic buildings & sites
Historic districts
Historic sites
Historical buildings
Historical structures
in situ monitoring
IR pigments
Iridium
Mitigation
Optic characteristics
Optics
Overheating
Passive cooling
Pavements
Paving
Pigments
Preservation
Protected areas
Prototypes
Reflectance
Regulations
Rural areas
Surface temperature
Thermal comfort
Urban areas
Urban heat island
Urban heat islands
title New cool concrete for building envelopes and urban paving: Optics-energy and thermal assessment in dynamic conditions
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