Solar radiation reflective coating material on building envelopes Heat transfer analysis and cooling energy saving

Heat transfer through building envelopes constitutes the dominant part of indoor cooling load in summer. Coating building external walls with high reflectivity materials proves to be an effective way to reduce heat gains from solar radiation and save cooling energy consumption accordingly. In this p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Energy exploration & exploitation Vol. 35; no. 6; pp. 748 - 766
Main Authors: Zhang, Yin, Long, Enshen, Li, Yanru, Li, Pan
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London, England Sage Publications, Ltd 01-11-2017
SAGE Publications
SAGE Publishing
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Summary:Heat transfer through building envelopes constitutes the dominant part of indoor cooling load in summer. Coating building external walls with high reflectivity materials proves to be an effective way to reduce heat gains from solar radiation and save cooling energy consumption accordingly. In this paper, the transient heat transfer model of building external envelopes is established and validated through experiment, to investigate the thermal performance of building walls coated with retro-reflective materials. Moreover, taking an office building in Chengdu as an illustrative example, the cooling energy saving potential of such retro-reflective material coated building is evaluated in summer. The experiment results show that for the building box with retro-reflective coating materials (r=0.59), the average indoor air temperature is about 2.4°C lower than the reference box without coating materials, resulted from decreasing heat absorption of solar radiation for external walls. Furthermore, the illustrative example in Chengdu shows the cooling load can be reduced by about 9.1 W/m2, with such retro-reflective coating materials for building external walls, saving 15.2% electricity consumption in a whole summer. The incremental investment for coating can be paid back by 9.1 years for the studied case. Moreover, economic analysis and comparison indicate that such coating material is more applicable to southern cities in China, since the payback period is shorter due to more cooling energy saving for those with hot summer. This work can provide guidance for practical building envelope thermal design.
ISSN:0144-5987
2048-4054
DOI:10.1177/0144598717716285