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PASSIVE
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er
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LOW ENERGY
COOLING OF
BUILDINGS
eK
BARUCH GIVONI
®)
JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC.
New York * Chichester * Weinheim + Brisbane * Singapore + TorontoANOTE TO THE READER
This book has been electronically reproduced from
digital information stored at John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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‘Copyright © 1994 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved
Published simultaneously in Canada
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assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Givoni, Barvch.
Passive and low energy cooling of buildings / Baruch Givoni.
pcm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-471-28473-4
|. Ai conditioning. 2. Ventilation, 3. Buildings—Energy
conservation. 1. Title.
‘TH7687.5.G54 1994
697.9 3—de20 94-1136
Printed in the United States of America
109876CONTENTS
PREFACE vir
1 OVERVIEW: THE VARIOUS PASSIVE COOLING SYSTEMS AND THI
APPLICABILITY TO DIFFERENT CLIMATES AND BUILDING TYPt
Introduction 1
Comfort Ventilation 5
Radiant Cooling 9
Evaporative Cooling 12
The Earth as a Cooling Source _15
Summary: Applicability of the Various Passive Cooling Systems 16
‘2 MINIMIZING COOLING NEEDS BY BUILDING DESIGN at
Building Layout (Shape) 22
Building’s Orientation (Solar and Wind Considerations) 23
Size of Windows 26
Shading of Windows 28
Color of the Envelope 30
Climatic Impact of Plants Around Buildings 34
3) VENTILATIVE CooLING 37
Section 1: Comfort Ventilation 38
‘Comfort Standards and Ventilation Requirements 38
Building Design for Natural Ventilation 41
Section 2: Noctural Ventilative Cooling _S2
Experimental Studies in Israel on Night Ventilative Cooling 53
Experimental Study in California on Night Ventilative Cooling 55
Experimental Formula Predicting the Expected Indoor Maximum
‘Temperature _ 60
Climatic Applicability of Nocturnal Ventilative Cooliny
Implications of Different Storage Options for Ventilative Cooling 66
Diurnal Gooling Capacity and Its Computation 74
4 RADIANTCOOLING = 81
Introduction: Overview of Radiant Cooling Options 81
Heat Transfer Processes in Radiant Cooling 88
‘Techniques to Increase the Net Heat Loss 95
Concepts and Systems Utilizing Radiant Cooling 101
vVil CONTENTS
Summary: Applicability of Radiant Cooling 122
Appendix: The Ingersoll/Givoni Model of Radiant Cooling 123
S EVAPORATIVE COOLING SYSTEMS 131
Introduction 131
Section 1: Direct Evaporative Cooling Systems 134
Mechanical Evaporative Cooling Systems 135
Homemade Passive Direct Evaporative Cooling Devices 138
The Cooling Tower of Cunningham and Thompson 139
Inertial Convective/Evaporative “Shower” Cooling Tower 143
‘Section 2: Indirect Evaporative Cooling by Roof Ponds 147
Introduction to Roof Ponds 147
Ventilated Roof Ponds with Fixed Insulation 149
Roof Ponds with Floating Insulation 152
Insulation Embedded within the Pond 158
Effect of Building Details and Climate on the Thermal Performance of Buildings
Cooled by Roof Ponds 161
Ground-based Ponds as Cooling Sources for Buildings 163
‘Summary of the Design Issues Posed by Cooling Ponds 166
Section 3: Appendices 168
Appendix 1: Model of the Cunningham and Thompson Tower 168
Appendix 2: Model of the Inertial “Shower” Cooling Tower 173
Appendix 3: Model of Buildings with Ventilated Roof Ponds 180
6 THEEARTH ASA COOLING SoURCE Fon BUILDINGS 191
The Unmodified Soil Temperature 192
Cooling the Soil in Summer by Surface Treatments 197
Options for Utilizing the Cooled Soil 209
Studies on “Active” Cooling by Earth Tubes 214
Architectural Aspects of Earth-Sheltered Buildings 218
Storing Winter Cold Underground for Summer Utilization 224
Appendix 1: Mathematical Models of the Natural Soil Temperature 227
Appendix 2: Simplified Model Based on Experimental Studies 231
‘7 COOLING OF ATTACHED OUTDOOR SPACES 239
Environmental Factors Affecting Comfort in Outdoor Spaces 239
General Considerations in Cooling Outdoor Spaces 241
Lowering the Surface Temperature in Shaded Outdoor Spaces 243
Lowering the Air Temperature in Outdoor Spaces 244
Discussion of Issues Specific to Adjacent Outdoor Spaces 252
inpex 259image
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Passive Cooling and Bioclimatic Architecture
‘The design and application of passive cooling systems is often confused with appropriate
architectural design for hot regions, currently termed “tropical bioclimatic architecture.”
The distinction between these two concepts is not always clear, but it is important. The
following definitions present the author's personal interpretation of the two concepts.
Any building is heated up during the day, and it cools down during the night as a result
of heat loss to the outdoor air by convection and of radiant loss to the sky. These natural
cooling processes occur even when the building is not provided with specialized passive
cooling systems. The daytime heating and night cooling result in an indoor average
temperature that is somewhat above the outdoor air temperature average, owing to solar
radiation that is absorbed in the building’s envelope and penetrates through the windows.
All the heat gained during the day is lost during the night. Specifically, this pattern occurs
when the climate is stable, with about the same diurnal average over a period of several
days (a steady periodic pattern).
Thus, in reality, even if the windows are effectively shaded and the envelope has a
reflective (white or light) color, the indoor average would be above the outdoor average.
This is true even in an unoccupied building, and it is a result of some unavoidable solar
‘energy absorption in the envelope. Higher solar gain, when the envelope has darker colors
and there is internal heat generated by occupants (through cooking, lighting, and so on),
increases this indoor temperature elevation. The overall elevation of the indoor average
temperature caused by the direct and indirect solar energy gain is referred toas the “sol-ait
temperature elevation.”
From the thermal performance point of view, in the context of cooling in summer,
bioclimatic architectural design therefore can only minimize the sol-air elevation—that is,
the elevation of the diurnal indoor average temperature above the outdoor average. Any
lowering of the indoor average below the outdoor level requires the input of cooling energy
which, in passive systems, is obtained from natural renewable sources. This is the opera-
tional definition of passive cooling systems applied in this book.
Bioclimatic architecture in hot regions, by this definition, involves architectural design
and choice of materials aiming at providing comfort while minimizing the demand for
energy used to cool a building, Itinvolves minimizing heat gain by the building, minimi
ing solar heating of the envelope and solar penetration through windows, providing
comfort by natural ventilation, and so on.
Architectural means for achieving these aims include such conventional design ele-
ments as the layout of the building; its orientation; the number, size, location, and details
of its windows; the shading devices that surround it, and the thermal resistance and heat
capacity of its envelope. Appropriate application of these design elements can bring the
average indoor temperature close to the level of the outdoor average but usually not below
this level.
On the other hand, the various passive cooling systems discussed in this book are
capable of transferring heat from a building to various natural heat sinks. To achieve this
end special design details must be applied to the building.
In a way, passive cooling systems provide “active” cooling through the use of passive
processes, which often use heat-flow paths that do not exist in buildings that lack these
systems. The application of a passive cooling system usually requires specialized details inOverview: The Passive Cooling Systems—Applicability in Different Climates and Building Types 3
the design and construction of various building components, including the roof and other
internal structural elements.
Appropriate architectural bioclimatic design in a region with hot summers can be
considered as a precondition for the application of passive cooling systems, and the two
approaches supplement and reinforce one another. Therefore, although the subject of
bioclimatic architecture is dealt with in other books by this author (Givoni 1976, 1994), the
second chapter of this book presents a summary of the architectural means available to
minimize the cooling needs of a building.
Scope of this Chapter
‘This first chapter is an overview of passive cooling systems. It is intended mainly for
architects who are considering their application to a specific building in a given climate. It
summarizes the detailed information that is presented in the other chapters of the book,
each of which deals with a particular type of passive cooling. This chapter emphasizes
issues of applicability of the various systems in different climates and for various building
types. The figures mentioned in the text of this chapter are presented in the respective
chapters dealing with each system.
A recent book edited by Jeff Cook (1989) also provides a comprehensive review of
passive cooling techniques. However, the approach and emphasis in this book is different
than that in Cook’s book. Cook's book deals mainly with the physics of the heat loss to the
various natural heat sinks. Its conclusions are based mainly on mathematical modelling of
the various cooling systems. In the present book I have tried to put more emphasis on the
architectural and climatic application issues involved in the utilization of the same natural
heat sinks, Different techniques or systems by which the various natural heat cooling
sources can be utilized are described. Emphasis is given to available experimental data on
the performance of the different passive cooling systems under various climatic and testing
conditions.
Classification of Passive Cooling Systems
Buildings can be cooled by passive systems through the utilization of several natural heat
sinks such as the ambient air, the upper atmosphere, water, and the undersurface soil.
Each of these cooling sources can be utilized in various ways, resulting in different systems.
The various passive cooling systems are thus classified according to the major, or obvious,
natural source from which the cooling energy is derived:
— Comfort Ventilation: providing direct human comfort, mainly during the daytime
(Chapter 3).
— Nocturnal Ventilative Cooling: cooling the structural mass of the building interior
by ventilation during the night and closing the building during the daytime, thus
lowering the indoor daytime temperature (Chapter 3).
— Radiant Cooling: transferring into the building cold energy generated during the
night hours by radiant heat loss from the roof, or using a special radiator on the roof,
with or without cold storage for the daytime (Chapter 4).4@ PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
— Direct Evaporative Cooling: mechanical or nonmechanical evaporative cooling of
air. The humidified and cooled airis then introduced into the building (Chapter 5).
— Indirect Evaporative Cooling: evaporative cooling of the roof, for example by roof
ponds. The interior space is cooled without elevation of the humidity (Chapter 5).
— Soil Cooling: cooling soil below its natural temperature in a given region and uti-
lizing it as a cooling source for a building (Chapter 6).
— Cooling of Outdoor Spaces: Cooling techniques that are applicable to outdoor
spaces, such as patios, that are adjacent to a building (Chapter 7).
The applicability of a given cooling system depends on the specified limits (bound-
aries) of the indoor climate. It varies with the type of the building and the local climate.
Some cooling systems may be applied only to specific types of buildings or only under
specific climatic conditions.
‘The boundaries of the climatic conditions under which a given cooling system can be
applied are not the same in different countries. People living in hot regions, especially in
developing countries, usually accept higher temperatures and/or humidity levels because
of lower expectations and natural acclimatization. Therefore the upper limits suggested
below for the applicability of various cooling systems are given as a range rather than as a
fixed value. The subject of comfort is discussed in Chapter 3.
History of Passive Cooling
Systematic research on systems of passive cooling is a relatively recent phenomenon.
Individual studies on various elements of passive cooling have been carried out in various
research institutions during the past 25 years, But these were scattered efforts and did not
produce a comprehensive and synoptic body of knowledge.
When the energy crises of the 1970s aroused interest in the use of natural renewable
energies as substitutes for conventional fuels in buildings, this interest was directed to the
use of solar energy for heating. This led co the development of “active” solar heating
systems. In time the focus in solar space heating shifted to passive systems, but still the
emphasis was on heating. Only in about 1978 did more worldwide interest arise and
systematic research start in passive cooling systems.
‘There seem to be several reasons for the recent emerging interest in passive cooling
techniques. The first is obviously the rising cost of electricity, especially during peak
demand times. Peak demand is often caused by the increased use of air conditioning in hot
summer days. In addition to consumer concern with the rising cost, there is an insticutional
interest in flattening the demand for energy by cutting down peak demand, which
determines the need for generation capacity.
In the United States there is another factor that has focused interest on passive
cooling. This is the internal migration of population to the southern and southwestern
states. These states have hotter climates than the northeastern states, and their expanded
population increases the demand for cooling. More recently there has been a global
interest in reducing the emission of “greenhouse gases” suspected of causing global
warming. Reducing power generation by lowering the demand for air conditioning can be
helpful also in this respect.image
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availableOverview: The Passive Cooling Systems—Applicability in Different Climates and Building Types 7
window design on the internal air flow pattern in discussed in Chapter 3. More detailed
discussion of this subject is presented in Givoni (1976, 1993) and in Chandra et al. (1983).
Nocturnal Ventilative Cooling
When a building is ventilated at night its structural mass is cooled by convection from the
inside, bypassing the thermal resistance of the envelope. During the daytime the cooled
mass, when it has sufficient amount and surface area and if itis adequately insulated from
the outdoors, can serve as a heat sink. By radiation and natural convection it can absorb the
heat penetrating into it, mainly through the windows, along with the heat generated inside.
To this effect, the building should be closed (unventilated) during the daytime to prevent
the interior being heated by the hotter outdoor air. In this respect daytime comfort
ventilation and nocturnal ventilative cooling are mutually exclusive.
There is a point in designing a building for ventilative cooling only if comfort
conditions can be maintained during the daytime hours in an unventilated building.
Attainment of such performance depends both on the climatic conditions and on the
design details of the building, From the climatic aspect the main relevant factors affecting
the performance of convective cooling are the diurnal temperature range and the typical
maximum temperature during the hottest months. A large diurnal range is needed because
the achievable drop of the indoor maximum below the outdoor maximum is, fora building
designed for this purpose, roughly proportional to the outdoor temperature range. For a
high mass, well insulated, and well shaded building a drop of the indoor maximum below
the outdoor maximum of about 35 to 45% of the outdoor range (depending on the actual
thermal resistance, heat capacity, and solar protection levels) is possible when the building
is wmventilated day and night. The indoor minimum temperature will be higher than the
outdoor minimum also by about 35 to 45% of the outdoor range. A typical indoor tempera-
ture swing for such a high mass building is about 10 to 20% of the outdoor range.
Ventilating the indoor space during the night lowers the indoor temperatures. It is
possible co lower the indoor minimum more than the maximum. With nocturnal ventila-
tion rates practical at night in residential buildings the indoor minimum in a building
ventilated at night could be lowered below the level of an unventilated building by about
half of the difference between the minimum of a closed building and the outdoor mini-
mum. The drop of the indoor maximum by the nocturnal ventilation is smaller, about one
half of the minimum drop (see the experimental studies below).
Ventilative cooling is applicable mainly in arid and desert regions, which have a large
diurnal temperature range (about 12 to 15°K or more) and where the night minimum
temperature in summer is below about 20°C. In such regions it is possible co store the
coolness of the night air in the structural mass of the building. The flow of outdoor air at
night through the building can be induced naturally by the wind (where wind speed at
night at the building site is sufficient—above 2-3 m/s) or mechanically by an exhaust fan.
During the following day the cooled mass serves as a heat sink, maintaining the indoor
temperatures well below the outdoor level, if possible within the comfort range. This
temperature reduction can be achieved only when the building is well insulated, with the
insulation external to the structural mass, and if the building is not ventilated by the hot
outdoor air during the daytime hours.image
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availableOverview: The Passive Cooling Systems—Applicability in Different Climates and Building Types. (1
availability of a simple, inexpensive, convenient, and trouble-free system of movable
insulation is still in question. For example, Clark (1989), in summarizing the experience
gained with the different buildings that have applied the “Skytherm” system, notes, “Asa
one-of-a-time kind installation, the conventional horizontally rolling panels have also been
expensive and mechanically unreliable.”
Specialized Long-Wave Radiators
In order to utilize the cooling effect of nocturnal radiation by buildings with ordinary
insulated roofs, the cold produced at the external surface, above the insulation, should be
transferred into the building’s interior. Usually this “cold transfer” is provided by air flow
under the radiating element, cooling it to.a temperature below the ambient. The cooled air
is blown through the interior space to cool the mass of the building, in a similar way to
nocturnal ventilative cooling discussed above, but with a temperature below the level that
can be achieved by direct ventilation with the outdoor air. The cooled mass then serves
during the following day as a sink for heat penetrating into and generated inside the building.
Any painted metallic layer placed over the roof, with an air space of about five to ten cm
beneath it, could serve as a radiator. The radiator can serve also as a rainproofing element.
When air flows under the radiator at night it is cooled, while the radiator’s temperature
rises. Metals have low emi and thus are poor radiators. Therefore the external
surface of the metal should be painted so that the paint would provide an emissive layer in
thermal contact with the conductive metal underneath.
The temperature drop attained by a radiator without air flow underneath is the
“stagnation temperature drop.” To be of any value as a cooling system the radiator’s
stagnation temperature should be lower than the ambient air by some minimum tempera-
ture drop—at least S°C. If it is not, the simpler and less expensive nocturnal ventilative
cooling could be applied. Ambient air drawn under the radiator can be cooled by about one
third to two thirds of the stagnation depression achieved by the radiator, depending on the
flow rate.
‘Two approaches were considered and tested in order to augment the temperature
drop and the effective cooling that can be obtained by metallic radiators. One approach
minimized the convective heat gain through the use of a polyethylene film serving as a
wind screen, while the other applied a selective surface to the radiator. These methods are
discussed in Chapter 4.
Applicability of Radiant Cooling
‘The roof is the only element of a building that has much exposure to the sky and therefore
is the natural location for a nocturnal radiator. High-mass roofs with operable insulation,
ier of concrete or with roof ponds, provide the functions of cold collection and of storage
in one element. Therefore, these types of radiant cooling are effective in providing dayrime
cooling in almost any region with low cloudiness at night, regardless of the air humidity.
A radiant cooling system that uses a metallic radiator with a fan-driven air flow under-
neath can cool she night air below the ambient level. The main climatic requirement is againimage
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availableOverview: The Passive Cooling Systems—Applicability in Different Climates and Building Types 1S
The indoor air temperature in a residential building cooled by a direct evaporative cooling
system is about 2 to 4°K above the temperature of the humidified air, depending on the
cooled air flow rate, the thermal quality of the building, and its solar load. These factors
serve as the basis for suggesting the applicability limits for direct evaporative cooling.
Indoor air speed can be enhanced in a closed building by the use of fans. Consequently,
indirect evaporative cooling can be applied in places where the WBT is 24°C. and the
maximum DBT is 44°C.
THE EARTH AS A COOLING SOURCE
The earth mass under, around, and sometimes also above a building can serve in most
climatic regions as a natural cooling source for the building, either in a passive or an active
way. In regions with a temperate climate the natural temperature of the soil in summer, at a
depth of two to three meters, may be low enough to serve as a cooling source. In hot
regions, where cooling is more of interest, the “natural” temperature of the soil in summer
is usually too high for it to serve as a cooling source.
However, it is possible by very simple means to lower the earth temperature well
below the “natural” temperature characteristics of a given location. Experiments in Israel
and North Florida have demonstrated that it is possible to lower the earth surface
temperature by about 8 to 10°K below the summer temperature of the exposed soil.
‘Two methods have been used successfully to lower the earth temperature by shading
it while permitting water to evaporate from the surface:
A Covering the soil with a layer of mulch, for example gravel or wood chips, at least 10
cm thick and, in regions with dry summers, irrigating it.
8 Raising the building off the ground and allowing water that was provided by either
summer rains or irrigation to evaporate from the shaded soil surface.
Once the soil surface temperature in summer is lowered the temperatures of the layers
below the surface are also lowered. Figure 62 shows diurnal temperature patterns of
“natural” and cooled soil in Israel. Figures 6.6 and 6.7 show seasonal and diurnal tempera-
ture patterns of cooled soil in Tallahassee, Florida. These figures demonstrate that the
difference between the outdoor maximum air temperature and the cooled earth tempera-
ture in midsummer can be up to about 12 to 14°K in arid regions and up to 10 to 12°K in
some hot humid regions. With such a temperature difference the soil can provide a heat
sink for a building, especially in cooling the ventilation air.
Figure 6.6 demonstrates that even in a hot humid region such as Florida itis possible to
cool the soil in summer to a level below the outdoor minimum temperature. The differ-
ence between the outdoor maximum and the cooled soil is greatest during periods of
ambient heat waves.image
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availableOverview: The Passive Cooling Systems—Applicability in Different Climates and Building Types 19
as a cooling source. However, it is possible by very simple means to lower the earth
temperature well below the “natural” temperature characteristics of a given location.
When the soil temperature is cool enough, it is possible to use it to cool buildings by
several methods. In the case of earth-covered buildings the cool earth mass provides direct
conductive passive cooling. This approach would be most suitable in hot, dry regions with
mild winters. In regions with hot summers but cold winters the direct-conductive coupling
of the indoor space with the surrounding soil may cause a high rate of heat loss in winter. In
these regions, indirect “active” coupling of the building to the cool soil, by circulating air
through pipes imbedded in the soil, can provide the required cooling.
REFERENCES
Chandra, S., P. Fairey, and M. Houston. 1983. A Handbook for Designing Ventilated Buildings.
Cape Canaveral, Florida: Florida Solar Energy Center.
Clark, G. 1989. “Passive Cooling Systems.” In J. Cook, Ed., Passive Cooling, pp. 347-538.
Cook, J, Ed. 1989. Passive Cooling. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Givoni, B. 1976, Man, Climate and Architecture, 2nd ed. London: Applied Science Pub.
1994. Urban and Building Design Guidelines for Different Climates. In preparation for
Publication by Van Nostrand Reinhold.image
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of indirect solar gain through walls, on the other hand, can be minimized effectively
through the use of a reflective (white) color or through shading by plants, as well as by
adequate thermal resistance (insulation) of the walls and the roof.
‘The potential of solar penetration through windows in summer, and its effect on the
elevation of the indoor temperature, depends greatly on the orientation of the windows.
This is illustrated in Figure 2.1, which shows the indoor temperatures of unventilated
thermal models with unshaded windows facing in the four cardinal directions. It can be
seen that with an outdoor maximum temperature of about 26°C the indoor maximum in
the model with the east window reached about 33°C (elevation of about 9°C above the
outdoor temperature at that time). The model with the western window has reached a
maximum of about 38°C (12°C above the corresponding outdoor temperature). The
maximum temperatures of the models with the south and the north windows were about
30°C, only 4 degrees above the outdoor maximum temperature.
Indoor temperature elevation caused by solar energy penetrating through southern
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«
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a
=
# 2s
20)
4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 2 4(hours)
TIME
Gosed window facing -S— -—-—-—-—-
Closed window facing —N—
Closed window facing —E— ——----
Goved vandow facing -W- ———————-
Fioune 2.1 Indoor temperatures of unventilated thermal models with unshaded windows
facing the four cardinal directions.image
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available28 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
SHADING OF WINDOWS
Solar gain through windows is a major component of the total heat gain of a building.
Minimizing this heating source through the use of shading devices is therefore of primary
importance in all types of hot climates. The effectiveness of shading in minimizing the
solar effect, as well as minimizing the effect of window's orientation, i illustrated in Figure
2.2 (Givoni 1976). The figure shows the same thermal models shown in Figure 2.1, but here
all the windows are shaded by venetian blinds that have been placed outside the glazing, It
can be seen that the differences in the indoor temperatures of the models with the different
orientations are very small. The temperatures in all models closely follow the outdoor pattern.
Shading devices can be of two major types: fixed or adjustable. Adjustable shading
devices can be applied either outside the glazing (exterrial shading) or inside (internal
shading). Each one of these types has different performance characteristics and different
implications from the architectural viewpoint. In hot dry regions the differences in
performance between the different types of shading devices is even more significant than
in other climates.
Fixed Shading Devices
Fixed shading devices are major architectural features and they provide one of the main
ways to articulate the facades of a building. Many architects have used fixed shading
devices as the main determinant of architectural expression. However, the choice of a
given shading type is often based not on its thermal effect but rather on stylistic considerations.
‘There is a consensus with respect to the appropriate fixed shading for southern and
northern windows. In the northern hemisphere a horizontal overhang above a southern
window, extending sufficiently on both sides, can be designed to provide complete
° 8 0 2 4 6 1 20 22 26 2 4 @{houre)
2.2. ‘The same thermal models shown in Figure 2.1,but with all the windows shaded by
venetian blinds placed outside the glazing.image
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available32 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
radiant loss was greater than the solar energy absorbed in the white roofs. This phenomenon,
of white roofs being at lower diurnal temperatures than the ambient air, was observed
repeatedly, with different roof types, even in midsummer on very clear days.
Effect of Wall Color
Figure 25 shows the temperatures of the indoor air of four test cells in Haifa (solid concrete
and Ytong 12 and 22 cm thick), when the walls were painted gray and the windows were
closed. The indoor temperatures were constantly above the outdoor. The average indoor
air temperatures of the cells with the thick walls were about 4.5°K above the outdoor
average and those of the cells with the thin walls about 4.4°K. It should be noted that this,
elevation was caused only by the solar energy absorbed in the walls—the roofs were kept
white. The indoor maxima were above the outdoor maximum. In the case of the celll with
the 12 cm concrete walls the temperature difference was about 8°K.
Figure 2.6 shows similar temperature patterns when the walls were painted white.
During most of the daytime hours the indoor temperatures were below the outdoor. The
daily average elevations above the outdoor average air temperature of the indoor ait was about
L1°K. The indoor maxima of the cells with the thick walls were about 2°K below the outdoor
maximum and the maxima of the cells with the chin walls were at about the same level.
Ficure 2.8 ‘Temperatures of indoor air and of interior surfaces of the western walls, of three
test cells (solid concrete, hollow concrete block and Ytong). Walls gray and windows closed.image
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available36 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
REFERENCES
Akbari, H., 8. Davis, S. Dorsano, J. Huang, and S. Winnett. 1992. Cooling Our Communities.
US Environmental Protection Agency—PM-221.
Al Hemiddi, N. 1991. “Measurements of Surface and Air Temperatures Over Sites with
Different Land Treatments.” Submitted to the PLEA) Conference in Seville, Spain.
Chandra, S.,P. Fairy, and M. Houston. 1983. A Handbook for Designing Ventilated Buildings.
Cape Canaveral, Florida: Florida Solar Energy Center.
Clark, G. 1989. “Passive Cooling Systems.” In J. Cook, Ed., Passive Cooling, pp. 347-538.
Cook, J, Ed. 1989. Passive Cooling. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Cowan, H. J. 1992. Encyclopedia of Building Technology. New York: Van Nostrand
Reinhold.
Givoni, B. 1976. Man, Climate and Architecture. 2nd Ed., Applied Science Pub., London.
1987. “Passive Cooling—State of the Art.” Portland, OR: Proc, 12th Passive Solar
Conf, pp. 11-19.
1991a. “Performance and Applicability of Passive and Low Energy Cooling Systems.”
Energy and Buildings, V-17, pp. 177-199.
1991b. “Impact of Planted Areas on Urban Environmental Quality.” Atmospheric
Environment, 25B, pp. 289-300.
—— 1992. Windows in Buildings. Chapter 18 in Cowan, 1992.
1994, Building and Urban Design Guidelines for Different Climates. New York: Van
Nostrand Reinhold.
Givoni, B, and M. E. Hoffman, 1968. Effect of Building Materials on Internal Temperatures.
‘Technion: Israel Institute of Technology: Research Report, Building Research Station.
Hoyano, A. 1988. “Climatological Uses of Plants for Solar Control and the Effects on the
Thermal Environment of a Building.” In Energy and Buildings, V-11, pp. 181-199.
McPherson, E. G., J. R. Simpson, and M. Livingston. 1989, “Effect of Three Landscape
Treatments on Residential Energy and Water Use in Tucson, AZ.” Energy and
Buildings, V-13 (2), pp. 127-138.
Meier, A. K. 1990. “Measured Cooling Savings From Vegetative Landscaping.” Washington,
D.C. Proc, ACEEE 1990 Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings Environment,
pp. 4.133-4.143.
Parker, J. H. 1983. “The Effectiveness of Vegetation on Residential Cooling.” Passive Solar
Journal, pp. 123-132.
1987. “The Use of Shrubs in Energy Conservation Plantings.” Landscape Journal,
V-6, pp. 132-139.
—— 1989, “The Impact of Vegetation on Air Conditioning Consumption.” Proceedings,
Conf. on Controlling the Summer Heat Island. Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley,
California. LBL-27872, pp. 46-52.image
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available40 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
In addition to the humidity issue, the subject of acceptable indoor air speed in
un-conditioned buildings deserves special attention. A higher air speed is the most
common “remedy” to minimize discomfort from high temperature, and especially from
high humidity. The ASHRAE limit of 0.8 m/s seems therefore to be far too restrictive when
dealing with providing comfort in un-conditioned residential buildings in countries with
hot summers.
Comfort ventilation can be provided at any time when it is physiologically beneficial,
during day time and/or evening and night hours, in contrast with nocturnal ventilative
cooling. With a high ventilation rate the indoor air temperature tends to approach the
outdoor level, although the radiant temperature of indoor surfaces may be at a significantly
different, and usually higher, level, especially during the evening and night hours.
The radiant temperature of an unventilated indoor space, in the absence of solar
penetration, is close to the average temperatures of the surfaces surrounding the space,
weighted according to their respective areas. During daytime hours, mainly around noon
and in the afternoon, the temperatures of the internal surfaces of the external walls and of
the ceiling tend to be higher than the indoor air temperature, as the direction of the heat
flow across the envelope is inward. The difference between the indoor air temperature and
the radiant temperature increases as the walls (and the roof) are of lower thermal resistance,
of higher heat capacity (mass), and with darker external colors.
A strategy relying on comfort ventilation, which is common mainly in warm, humid
regions, calls for design details that will maximize the comfort achievable with natural
ventilation. The relevant design factors are discussed in the next section. When dealing
with ventilation in the context of its effect on comfort, it should be remembered that the
important factor is the air speed over the human body. This air speed can be increased by
opening the windows for natural ventilation with outdoor air, and also by the use of such
devices as ceiling fans in closed buildings. The later option is often preferable when
nocturnal ventilative cooling is the chosen strategy.
Climatic Applicability of Comfort Ventilation
Providing a higher indoor air speed in hot regions by natural ventilation is desirable when
the outdoor air is at a lower temperature than the indoor air or when it prevents elevation of
the indoor vapor content of the air. This situation is common in hot, humid regions. On the
other hand, appropriate building design in hot, dry regions can keep the indoor tempera-
ture during the daytime at significantly lower levels than the outdoor maximum temperature.
‘The vapor content of the indoor air in such regions is, in most cases, low enough so that
indoor vapor generation does not raise it to levels producing discomfort due to sensible
perspiration. In this case, when a higher indoor air speed is desired, it may be preferable to
provide it by fans rather than to ventilate the building with warmer outdoor air by opening
the windows.
Assuming an indoor air speed of 1.5 to 2.0 m/s, comfort ventilation is applicable mainly
in regions and seasons when the outdoor maximum ait temperature does not exceed about
28 to 32°C, depending on the humidity level and the acclimatization of the population, and
where the diurnal temperature range is less than about 10°C (Givoni 1991).
‘These conditions are typical in warm humid climates. In these regions the relativelyimage
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Geometrical Configuration
The term “geometrical configuration” is used here to describe such features as the
compactness of the buildings, the ratio of external walls to floor area, and the existence of
porches and balconies projecting outward or recessed inward from the main facade. Such
features affect the options for providing openings as well as the details of the pressure
distribution along the various facades of the building. These two factors, in turn, deter-
mine the potential for effective cross ventilation.
Generally speaking, the more spread out the building and the more irregular its shape,
the better the potential for cross ventilation. Two different factors contribute to this effect.
As the area of the external walls for a given floor area increases, there are more
opportunities to provide openings that will catch wind from different directions and
provide direct and independent ventilation to the various rooms in the building, In this
respect, there might be a conflict between ven and energy conservation when the
building is either heated or air conditioned—if it is air conditioned, a compact configura
tion is more desirable.
Itis possible, however, to design a building with special details that will enable it to be
compact when it is heated and to be widespread and irregular in shape when itis naturally
ventilated. For instance, it is possible to design a building with porches recessed inward
and flanked by the adjoining rooms. The porches should be equipped with operable large
windows and/or insulated shutters, as is illustrated in Figure 32. When windows and
shutters are open, the porch is open, providing a ventilation option for the adjoining rooms
through windows or doors. On the other hand, when the windows and/or shutters of the
porch are closed, the facade becomes smooth, reducing the area of heat loss.
ure 3.24 A building with recessed porches and insulating shutters open. The porch
functions as an open space, providing ventilation for adjoining rooms.image
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building is cross ventilated, enlarging its windows increases the airflow rate and interior air
speed. See Figure 3.6 (Givoni 1962).
For a given overall area of windows, having equal areas of inlet and outlet openings
produces the highest flow rate and indoor air speeds. When inlet and outlet openings are
not of equal area, the flow rate is determined mainly by the smallest one, either the inlet or
the outlet.
Increasing the area of inlet openings without a corresponding increase of outlets, or
vice versa, produces only a small increase in interior air speed. When the inlet is small and
the outlet is large, maximum indoor speed is much higher and average speed only slightly
higher, compared with the situation when the inlet is large and the outlet small. On the
other hand, the distribution of speeds in the room is much more nearly equal when the
inlet is large and the outlet is smaller.
‘Taking into account these characteristics, it can be suggested that small inlets may be
suitable in rooms where the place of occupancy is defined and is close to the inlet—for
example, in a bedroom with the bed next to the window. In this case, even a small inlet, if
placed over the bed, can provide a good airflow over it. It should be possible, of course, to
direct the flow, by the design details of the window, away from the bed (upward) when high
speed is not desirable. On the other hand, in a living room in which any spot may be
occupied (ata level of 0.5 to 1.0m above the floor),a large inlet would be most suitable even
if the outlet is small.
indoor air speed (%)
—# single noma —* single oblique —* cross vent normal ~& cross vent oblique
Fiaure 3.6 Effect of window size (width) and wind direction (normal or oblique to the wall)
‘on indoor air speed.image
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‘The low mass building is of conventional Californian stud-wall construction. All
external walls are fiberglass insulated to a resistance of R-11 (1.94 m:C/W). The ceiling is
insulated with fiberglass in the attic to an R-19 (3.35 m,C/W) level. The calculated diurnal
building loss coefficient of the buildings, BLC is 2315 Wh/day.C ot 101 Wh/m?.day.C (4390
Bru/dayF or 16.9 Beu/fe?dayF).
The high mass building has solid concrete walls, 10 cm thick, and is insulated
externally with rigid foam and plaster in order to have the same level of insulation as the
low mass building. The partition wall between the two rooms is also of solid concrete so
that the total volume of the concrete is about 5.75 m* or about 0.25 m* per each m? of the
floor area. The interior surface area of the concrete, interacting convectively with the
interior space, is about 65 m?.
The performance of the buildings were monitored under the following conditions:
1 Windows unshaded, closed day and night
2 Windows shaded, closed day and night
3 Windows shaded, closed during the day and ventilated at night by a fan with
three speeds
A Low speed
8 Mcdium speed
© High speed
Buildings Closed Day and Night
Figure 3.10 shows the daily indoor temperature patterns of the two buildings (along with
the outdoor temperature pattern and daily averages) during two series: first with unshaded
windows and then with windows shaded by external fixed shading devices. For a period of
time, starting on July 29, 1993, the buildings were shaded but not ventilated at night.
Figure 3.11 shows the daily indoor and outdoor maximum temperatures during these
two series. The daily average outdoor temperature is also shown in this figure.
Ic can be seen that, without shading, the indoor maximum temperatures in the two
buildings were above the outdoors’ maxima. With shading, the maximum of the low-mass
building was still above the outdoors’ maxima, but che maximum temperature of the
high-mass building was below the outdoors’ maxima. It can also be seen that the patterns.
of the indoor maxima follow closely the outdoor average but not the outdoor maximum. It
means that for buildings that are closed during the daytime there is better correlation
between the indoor maxima and the outdoor daily averages than with the outdoor
maximum temperatures.
Buildings Ventilated at Night with Shaded Windows
When buildings are ventilated at night the indoor temperature during the night hours
drops drastically, in turn lowering the indoor daily average temperature. However, the
effect of the night ventilation on the indoor daytime conditions may or may not be
significant.image
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many countries), nocturnal natural ventilation can be an effective cooling system. It can
lower daytime temperatures close to the level of the outdoor 24 hours’ average temperature,
especially in buildings with effective solar control. During sharp heat wave periods, such as
the “Hamsin” in the Middle East or the “Santa Ana” winds in California, the indoor
maximum can be lowered even below the outdoor average.
It should be noted that the 24 hours’ average is usually lower than the mean of the
maximum and minimum temperatures by about 1°K. In many countries and regions, the
only climatic information available is the maximum, minimum, and the mean between
them. Therefore, when the predictive formula is applied in such places, 1°K could be
reduced from the mean to get an estimate of the 24 hours’ daily average.
In arid and desert regions, with a diurnal temperature range in summer of about
15-20°K, expected indoor maximum temperature reduction can be up to about 10°K.
Although no daytime ventilation with outdoor hot air is desirable in buildings cooled
by nocturnal ventilation, the indoor comfort limit can be extended by interior fans (e.g,
ceiling fans) to about 30°C in developed countries and to about 32°C in hot developing
countries. In this way the upper comfort limit is extended without heating the interior of
the building by daytime ventilation.
CLIMATIC APPLICABILITY OF NOCTURNAL
VENTILATIVE COOLING
Taking into account the relationships between the ambient vapor pressure and the
outdoor range in summer and between the indoor maximum temperature and the outdoor
range, (described above), it is possible to specify, in a Building Bio-Climatic Chart, the
‘outdoor maximum temperatures under which indoor comfort can be maintained in a welll
designed building as a function of the ambient vapor pressure. This is presented in Figure
3.17, together with an example of the simplified calculations that enable us to estimate the
indoor temperatures.
In this example, it is assumed that the outdoor minimum, maximum, and mean
temperatures are 18, 36, and 27°C, respectively. Thus the estimated 24 hours’ outdoor
average would be about 26°C. The indoor average temperature in a closed residential
building would be elevated by solar radiation and internal heat generation to about 29°C.
With an indoor swing of about 3°K, the maximum in the closed building would be about
305°C and the minimum about 27°C.
Nocturnal ventilation would lower the indoor maximum temperatures to about 27°C
(one degree C above the outdoor average) and lower the minimum to about 22°C.
Figure 3.17 shows the climatic boundaries, in terms of the outdoor maximum daily
temperatures, under which nocturnal convective cooling is applicable. The temperature
limit is reduced with higher humidity, reflecting the corresponding decrease of the
outdoor range with higher humidity. Increasing the indoor air speed by internal fans (not
by ventilation) can extend the indoor comfort range without elevating the indoor temperature.
A simple procedure for estimating the expected indoor maximum and minimum tempera-image
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When ventilation is natural—provided through open windows—privacy and security
considerations may limit the time when windows remain open. In many cases windows will
be closed when the room’s occupants retire to sleep. In such cases convective cooling
preferably should be based on mechanical exhaust ventilation with specialized and
protected openings, even when climatic conditions permit convective cooling by all-night
natural cross ventilation.
The system design details and thermophysical properties of the material that deter-
mine the attainable minimum temperature of the structural mass under a given minimum
outdoor air temperature are the outdoor airflow rate through the indoor space, the surface
area of the mass elements, the surface convective coefficient of the storage elements, the
mass element thickness, and the thermal conductivity of the mass materials. In practice
the indoor minimum temperature attainable by natural nocturnal ventilation may be
limited by the reduced wind speed at night. In many regions almost still air conditions
prevail after about 10 p.m, greatly reducing the rate of airflow through the building. In
such regions mechanical nocturnal ventilation can allow this method to work. As the fan
operation takes place during periods of minimum demand for electric power it is attractive
to the power utilities and so power often may be supplied at reduced rates.
Useful Maximum Mass Temperature
‘The useful average maximum temperature, the temperature to which the storage mass can
be heated during the day while the mass still absorbs heat while the indoor temperature
remains below the upper limit of the comfort zone, depends on a physiological considera-
tion—the upper limit of the comfort zone. It also depends on the difference between the
surface temperature of the mass and the accompanying indoor air temperature. This
temperature difference can be affected both by the design details of the building and by
the cooling system.
Icis during the time when the outdoor temperature drops sufficiently so that comfort can
be provided by natural or mechanical ventilation with outdoor air that this indoor temperature
is important. After that time, there is no further need to utilize the cold storage to ensure
indoor thermal comfort. It should be remembered that in high-mass buildings maximum
temperatures occur in the evenings. In many cases opening windows for cross ventilation
would be desirable, from the comfort viewpoint, before the time of the indoor maximum.
‘The maximum temperature at which the storage mass can still be utilized depends on
the indoor air upper limit for human comfort in unconditioned buildings. This limit, in
turn, depends on the ambient vapor pressure and the indoor air speed. The vapor pressure
depends on the local climate and thus sets a climatic limit for the applicability of the
system.
Taking into account these cwo factors the upper temperature limit for nocturnal
ventilative cooling may range under indoor still air conditions from about 25°C in semihumid
regions (vapor pressure of 18 to 20 mmHg) to about 28°C in arid regions (vapor pressure
below 15 mmHg). However, this upper limit of the indoor-air comfort zone can be
extended upward by increasing the indoor air speed, without introducing the (warmer)
outdoor air, with the help of fans. If a ceiling fan is used to increase indoor air speed to
about 2 mis, this limit is shifted upward to about 28°C in semihumid regions and 30°C inimage
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geometry and details of the inlet openings and their location within the walls. With
appropriate detailing it is possible to direct the main flow toward elements contemplated
for thermal storage. These elements include ceilings and massive walls. In this way it is
possible to significantly increase the surface coefficient and the rate of heat transfer
between the heat-storing mass and the indoor air.
Night Airflow in Channels within the Structural Elements
As discussed in the subsection “Attainable Minimum Storage Temperature,” ventilating a
building through open windows during the night may involve problems of security and
even discomfort—sometimes it may leave residents feeling too chilly. One way to over-
come these difficulties and at the same time to increase the cooling rate of structural cold-
storage elements is to blow outdoor air skrough channels embedded within the structural
elements. Floors of reinforced concrete with embedded channels can be cast in situ,
utilizing hollow concrete block. Also, prefabricated floor panels with embedded channels
are available in many countries.
In fact there is already a passive system that stores solar energy in this way: the Barra
system. This system was developed by Horazio Barra in Italy (Barra et al. 1987) as a passive
solar heating system. (See Figure 3.18) However, it can be used easily as a nocturnal
@®cuzinc
@ METAL LATH
© INSULATION
@soumH Room
© corrioor
©)NoRTH ROOM
Ficure3.18 The Barra system: floors of reinforced concrete with embedded channels for air
flow across the building.image
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08
$
2g
S
‘SOLAR SAVINGS FRACTION
Albuquerque, LCR = 18
Albuquerque, LCR = 36
Boston, LCR = 18
Boston, LCR = 36
0.0 100.0 200.0 300.0 400.0 500.0 600.0 700.0
EFFECTIVE HEAT CAPACITY (BtuF per sq. ft. of glazing)
Ficure 3.19 Comparison of calculations of the Solar Saving Fraction (SSF), in Boston and in
Albuquerque, by LANL simulation system and by Givoni’s model (after Elaine Best).
Wray and Best’s original formulas for calculating the dhe in the case of Direct Gain solar
buildings, with some changes in the notations to accommodate differences in the (wo
sources:
Let: X = thickness
k = conductivity
p =density
= specific heat
P= Pi=3.1415...
1 The thickness, X, of the mass element is expressed in Wray and Best (1987) ina
dimensionless form: t:
t= X/(24k/Ppc)
2 The asymptotic (maximum) value of dhe (max) is given by:
dhcoux = (24Kpc/2P)"*
3° The actual value of the dhe for a storage element with a given thickness is:
lhe = F(dAC max
where f(t) is:
f(=L(cosh 2t~cos2e)NKcosh 2t+c0821)]image
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available80 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
Chandra, S., K. Ruberg, and A. Kerestecioglu. “Outdoor Testing of Small Scale Naturally
Ventilated Models,” Building and Environment, Vol. 18, no. 1/2, 1983, pp. 45-53.
Dick, J. B. “The Fundamentals of Natural Ventilation of Houses,” Journal, Institution of
Heating and Ventilating Engineers, June 1950, pp. 123-132.
Evans, B. H. 1957. Natural Air Flow Around Buildings, Research Report No. 59, Texas
Engineering Experiment Station, Texas A & M College System.
Fanger, O. P. 1972. Thermal Comfort. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Givoni, B. 1981. “Convective Ventilation Cooling,” DOE Passive Cooling Workshop,
Philadelphia.
Kammerud, R., E. Ceballos, B. Curtis, W. Place, and B. Anderson. “Ventilation Cooling of
Residential Buildings,” ASHRAE Semiannual Meeting, Atlanta, January 1984.
Kusuda, T. Savings in Electric Cooling Energy by the Use of a Whole House Fan, NBS
‘Technical Note 1138, May 198
Lee, B. E., M. Hussain, and B. Soliman. “Predicting Natural Ventilation Forces upon
Low-Rise Buildings, ASHRAE Journal, February 1980.
Milne, M, and B. Givoni. 1979. “Architectural Design Based on Climate.” In Donald
Watson, ed. Energy Conservation through Building Design. New York: McGraw-Hill.
O'Hare, Michael, and Richard E. Kronauer. “Fence Designs to Keep Wind From Being a
Nuisance,” Architectural Record, July 1969, pp. 151-156.
Olgyay, V. 1963. Design wick Climate: Bioclimatic Approach to Architectural Regionalism. Princeton,
N. J: Princeton University Press.
Schubert, R. P., and B. Kennedy. “The Testing of Full Scale Ventilator Cap Types to
Determine Their Effect on Natural Ventilation,” Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of
AS/ISES, May 1981, pp. 901-905.
Sobin, H. J. “Window Design for Passive Ventilative Cooling: An Experimental Model-
Scale Study.” Proceedings of the International PassivelHybrid Cooling Conference, Miami
Beach, Fla, November 1981, pp. 191-195.
Soliman, B. F, and F. R. Frick. E/fect of Building Grouping on Wind Induced Natural Ventilation,
University of Sheffield, England.image
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should be considered only as a rough estimate. The only known wind parameters relevant
to the building are usually the wind speed and direction at some meteorological station,
which at best is close, but usually may be at some distance or even remote, from the
building in question.
Meteorological stations are usually located in open areas, where the wind speed is
jer than in a built up area. Furthermore, the wind fluctuates constantly, both in
ection and in speed, so that the relationship between wind conditions at the measuring
point and those next to the building with the radiator are changing constantly. In addition,
such design details of the roof itself as parapets can greatly affect the air speed next to the
radiator under a given wind speed measured near the building. Thus, there is no way to
know with reasonable accuracy the nature and speed of the wind next to the radiating
surface, and it should be realized that any value assigned to the convection coefficient in
the equations given by various models is only a rough estimate.
In those radiant cooling systems where it can be expected that the temperature of the
radiating surface for most of the night will be above ambient air temperature (for example,
when a massive concrete roof or water bags over the roof serve directly as the radiators), a
high wind speed increases the cooling rate by increasing the convective heat loss. On the
other hand, in those radiant cooling systems in which the radiator temperature is planned
to be below that of the ambient air (that is, when a lightweight air-cooling radiator is used)
infrared transparent windscreens can be applied to minimize convective heat gain from
the warmer air.
The general formula for convective heat exchange between the radiator and the
ambient air is:
Qah(T-T)
where his the convection coefficient. The problem is in evaluating the value of has a
function of the wind conditions. Various authors have suggested different formulae for
evaluating this coefficient (among them Clark and Berdahl (1981), Duffie and Beckmann
(1974), and Hansen and Yellott (1978). Givoni (Mostrel and Givoni 1982), based on the
analysis of various experimental data involving exposed and wind-screened radiators, has
suggested the following formulae:
For an exposed radiator:
h, = 0.6 + 3.54V)
For a radiator covered by a single Polyethylene layer:
he = 054 1.2¢V)
For a double-covered radiator:
h, = 0.3 + 0.8¢(V)5
The Stagnation Temperature of Lightweight Radiators
Formulae predicting the stagnation temperature of exposed and screened radiators as a
function of the meteorological (cemperature, humidity and wind speed) and screening
conditions of the radiator, has been developed by Mostrel and Givoni (1982) by balancingRadiant Cooling 93
the net radiant loss and the convective gain of a stagnant radiator. This formula does not
deal with cloudiness. The predictions by this formula have been compared with experimental
data.
When a radiator is wind-screened by polyethylene layers both the absorption of sky
radiation, Ray and the emittance of radiation to the sky, Reni, are modified by the
long-wave transmission of the windscreens, trans, and the emissivity of the radiator, E,:
Ray = E,rtrans*Ray
Renic = E,rtransto{T,)*
where o is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant, 0.567#10"; in W/m*K*.
‘The values of trans are assumed to be 70% for a single layer and 60% for a double layer.
‘The net radiant loss can thus be evaluated, under different cloudiness conditions, by
the formula (Mostrel and Givoni 1982):
Roe: = Cyrtrans*E,0.554(T Tay)
where C, is the Clark and Allen (1978) formula for the cloudiness coefficient:
C, = 1-0.056en
and n is the cloud cover index.
By balancing the net radiant loss and the convective gain, (Rac = Q.), the following
linearized formula (Mostrel and Givoni 1982) predicts the stagnation temperature, Tap of
a metallic radiator as a function of the air and sky temperatures, cloudiness, and the
windscreen transmittance:
Tieng = 254 CortranseE*T deur iyth oT,
= 0.544°C,rtrans*E,th.
A detailed description of the experimental studies in Sede Boger and the development
of the stagnation formula is presented in Givoni (1982) and in Mostrel and Givoni (1982).
Figure 44, a to d, shows the correspondence between the computed and measured
diurnal patterns of the stagnation temperature in four different experiments. Itcan be seen
that as long as dew has not formed on the polyethylene there is good correspondence
between the predicted and the measured data. However, the formula does not cake into
account the phenomenon of dew formation. Therefore, the formula does not predict the
disappearance of the effect of the wind screening on the radiator's temperature.
‘The Utilized Radiant Energy
Using radiant heat loss as a cooling source for a building depends on two factors: (a) the net
radiant energy loss from the radiator and (b) the convective heat gain of the radiator from
the air flowing under it.
Net energy loss from a radiator is the balance between three components of heat
exchange: the radiation emitted by the surface, the atmospheric radiation absorbed by the
radiator (which together determine the net radiant loss), and the convective heat exchange
between the radiator and the ambient air above it (a function of the radiator’s temperature,
its design details, and the wind speed). The direction of the convective heat exchange—94 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
zis Bu
2 a
< <
§ «
E é
# i #0
g
&
Kg
es o
TTS SETS
im TIME (HOURS) ‘am Pim_ TIME (HOURS) am
2) :0n September 18:18, 1961, humid cloudy The pttasend ha mmamenttempenien
night, wind speed affected the difference between the Patterns for the dry. clear night of October 13-14, 1981,
‘Gcuolecandsingle covered windecrecrs The double. —=«arevery sii
covered radistor's predicted temperature was 6°C
{12.°4) higher than that ofthe single-covere'spre-
icted temperature, until around midnight.
TEMPERATURE
WIND SPEED (m/sec)
WIND SPEED (rm/sec)
@ 0 22 4 6
¢ 8 022 4 6
pm TIME (HOURS) am
p.m TIME (HOURS) a.m.
b) On the dry, cloudy night of October 17-18, 1) : Humia, clear nights, such as the evening of
1981, the difference between the predicted and mea- October 11-12, 1981, atfect predicted and measured
sured temperatures of single- and double-covered ra- results of windscreened radiators. After dew forms, the
diators was not significant. measured patterns exhibit a sharp rise not anticipated
in the predicted patterns.
Fiaure 4.4 Correspondence between measured stagnation temperatures of metallic radia-
tors and temperatures predicted by Givoni’s formula.Radiant Cooling 95
whether it provides or extracts heat from the radiator—depends, of course, on the
temperature relationship between the radiator and the ambient air.
A mathematical model calculating the utilized radiant heat loss has been developed
by Ingersoll and Givoni and is described in the appendix to this chapter.
TECHNIQUES TO INCREASE THE NET HEAT Loss
‘Two techniques can be considered, separately or jointly, for increasing the rate of the net
heat loss from radiators:
‘4 Applying a windscreen, transparent to long-wave radiation, to reduce convective
heat gain from the ambient air.
® Applying a selective surface to the radiator, which emits mainly in the spectrum of
the sky window (between 8 and 13 j) and is reflective in the rest of the long-wave
spectrum and preferably also in the short wave (solar) spectrum.
Convective Gain Suppression by Wind-Screens
At night the temperature of lightweight radiators drops well below the ambient air
temperature. The radiator then gains heat from the ambient air by convection. A higher
wind speed increases the heat gain and reduces the temperature drop of the radiator.
Therefore, when it is desired to lower a radiator’s temperature well below the ambient
level it would be desirable to minimize convection without interfering too much with the
emission of long-wave radiation. This is always the case when a specialized lightweight
nocturnal radiator is used.
An inexpensive material that is about 75% transparent to long-wave radiation (infrared-
transparent) is polyethylene film without ultraviolet inhibitors. Ifa thin film of polyethyl-
ene is stretched firmly over a radiator, supported by either air pressure or tension so that it
does not flutter in the wind, a stagnant cold air layer is formed over the radiator. The
stagnant air layer and the film serve as transparent insulation, minimizing convective heat
gain and lowering the temperature of the radiator below the temperature drop of an
exposed radiator.
Radiative properties of polyethylene film (without ultraviolet inhibitors) were mea-
sured by Clark and Blanpied (1979). They studied the film’s infrared transmissivity, its
reflectivity, and its emissivity. Typical weighted averages (for the different angles of
incident) are:
‘Transmissivity = 0.75
Reflectivity = 0.10
Emissivity = 0.15
Even a single layer of polyethylene reduces emitted radiation by about 25 percent
because of its imperfect transmissivity. However, convective heat gain, when the radiator’s96 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
temperature is below that of the ambient air, is reduced to a much greater extent,
especially under windy conditions. Thus, the net effect is to increase the net heat loss and
the temperature depression of the radiator below ambient air temperature.
At the Institute for Desert Research in Sede Boger, Israel, extensive measurements of
the stagnation temperature of metallic radiators, both exposed and screened by polyethylene,
were carried on in a lengthy experimental series that lasted several months and were
performed under different meteorological and wind screen conditions (Givoni 1982-b,
Mostrel and Givoni 1982).
The radiators consisted of white-painted 45X45 cm thin iron plates that were insulated
by 10cm thick expanded polystyrene on their sides and bottom. An air space of I cm was
left between the iron plate and the bottom insulation. The wind screens consisted of
either one or two layers of polyethylene film, the first stretched about 3 cm above the
radiating plate and the second (when applied) 2 cm above the first. Detailed information
on this study is reported in Givoni (1982) and Mostrel and Givoni (1982).
Figure 4.5a-d (Givoni 1982) shows separate temperature patterns of metallic radiators
with and without a polyethylene wind-screen during four nights with different humidity
and cloudiness conditions, from 6 p.m. through 6 am. The figures also contain the
measured wind speed.
Figure 4.5a shows the temperature patterns of three radiators during a clear night with
low humidity (October 13-14, 1981). The first radiator was exposed, the second had one
layer of polyethylene, and the third had two layers of wind screen. The figure also shows
the ambient wind speed, which was about 4 m/s from 6 to 7 p.m. then dropped gradually to
about 1.5.m/s at 9 p.m. This was a clear night with very low humidity.
Ic can be seen that the difference between the single and double layers of polyethy|-
ene was very small. Apparently, the reduced convective heat gain with the double wind
screen is balanced by a reduction in the radiant loss. It can also be seen that, as expected,
during most of the night the temperature drop of the screened radiators is larger than that
of the exposed radiator (about 10 and 7°C, respectively). No condensation was observed on
the polyethylene.
Itcan also be seen that the screened radiators were less sensitive to wind speed. With
the higher wind speed the temperature drop of the screened radiators was more than twice
that of the exposed one but with the lower wind speed the additional temperature drop
brought about by the wind screens was only about one third of the drop of the exposed
radiator.
Figure 4.5b shows the temperature patterns during a medium-humid night, with
higher wind speed than in Figure 4.5a, and with passing clouds (August 28-29, 1981).
The temperature of the screened radiator again remained lower than that of the
exposed one throughout the night. When it became cloudy the temperatures of both the
exposed and the screened radiators rose sharply.
However, the patterns observed with the screened radiators during these two nights
were not typical of others in the Sede Boger study. On most nights in this desert climate
the air temperature dropped down while the absolute humidity rose slightly. (Apparently
this pattern is a result of the stability of the air near the ground.) Condensation started to
form on the polyethylene sheets at about midnight or even earlier, and then the difference
between exposed and protected radiators gradually disappeared, as can be seen in Figures
4c and 45d. Figure 45d also shows a sharp rise in radiator temperature as a cloud passed
by between 3 and 4 a.m.a
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book.98 PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS
Selective Long-Wave Radiators
To maximize net long-wave radiant heat loss the radiative surface should reflect away
incoming atmospheric radiation from water, CO; and dust particles in the air while
strongly emitting at the long-wave spectrum of the atmospheric window. An ideal long-
wave radiator should have high absorptivity (and, therefore, high emissivity) in the 8to 13
spectral band and high reflectivity (and, therefore, low absorptivity) above and below this
band. In particular, it would be desirable to have a surface with high reflectivity also in the
solar spectrum (04 to 3.0 4) so that radiant cooling will continue during the daytime.
‘Theoretical discussion of the potential for radiant cooling that can be obtained by a
selective surface was presented by Catalanotti et al (1975). They have also built an
experimental model utilizing as a radiator a sheet of Tedlar (polyvinyl fluoride) with a thin
film of evaporated aluminum. A windscreen of thin polyethylene film has minimized the
convective gain. The experimenters have reported a stagnation temperature depression of
about 12°C. Daytime radiant cooling, with the radiator shaded from the direct solar
radiation, was reported to yield temperature depressions of up to 15°C.
This report has prompted widespread experimental research in several countries,
aimed at reproducing similar results. To the best knowledge of the author, all these
“validation” studies have not demonstrated a significant effect of the selective surfaces
that have been tested. Some of these studies are summarized below.
Experimental comparisons of radiant cooling obtainable by a gray-body emitter and a
selective emitter have been made by Mitchell in Australia, Sakkal, Martin, and Berdahl of
the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Miller and Bradley of the Desert Research Institute in
Nevada, and Landro and McCormick in Australia. The main results of these studies are
summarized below.
Mitchell
Mitchell (1976) reported on extensive research done on selective surfaces of nocturnal
radiators at che Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization in Australia.
In particular, the following surfaces were compared directly, under the same cli
conditions:
— Anodized aluminum
— Aluminized Tedlar
— Black paint
In spectral measurements the anodized aluminum has demonstrated selectivity.
However, at night, the depression of the three surfaces were about the same, from 6 to 8°C.
Thus the spectral selectivity of the anodized aluminum did not result in a higher total
radiant heat loss.
Sakkal et al.
‘The experimental study done by Sakkal et al. in Berkeley consisted of exposing two
horizontal plates covered with a polyethylene windscreen to a clear night sky and allowingimage
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PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY COOLING OF BUILDINGS |
BARUCH GIVONI
Here is a practical and stimulating sourcebook for building designers, written by one of the |
world’s leading authorities on energy-efficient cooling. You'll find comprehensive discussion of ]
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around the site. The book is packed with advice and insight you can put to work in any climate,
een ees
Alll major varieties of passive cooling systems are presented, with extensive analysis of per- |
formance in different types of buildifigs and in different climates:
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Beret
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practical guidance on optimal interior design for ventilation, to cutting-edge innovations like the
“shower tower” evaporative system, you'll find inventive, usable solutions to the most complex
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plus relevant studies by other leading authorities, to provide you with a wealth of applied
research and solid practical advice on passive cooling. This is a monumental resource; no seri-
ous practitioner or student of architecture and building design should be without it
ABOUT THE AUTHOR ull
rr Re Ee oe ure ec oe ec eee est
and Urban Planning at UCLA. His distinguished career includes teaching assignments at nearly
a dozen universities, hundreds of papers and contributions to scholarly works, and lectures and
en ee erento Seo Mca nette)
Dee Cn Sea arama Rc ee
globe on passive and solar energy design of structures in hot climates.
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605 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10158-0012
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