18MEO103T – Energy systems for Buildings
Unit – II Passive solar heating & Cooling
     Passive Solar Heating system
• Passive systems do not use mechanical devices such as fans, blowers, or pumps to distribute solar
  heat from a collector. Instead, they take advantage of natural heat flow to distribute temperature. An
  example of a passive system for space heating is a sunspace or solar greenhouse.
• Passive systems also make use of materials with large heat capacities (stone, water, or concrete) to
  store and deliver heat.
Advantages
• Passive solar design is highly energy efficient, reducing a building's energy demands for lighting, winter heating, and summer
  cooling.
• Energy from the sun is free. Strictly passive designs capture it without additional investments in mechanical and electrical "active
  solar" devices such as pumps, fans, and electrical controls.
• The passive solar design also reduces greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming because it relies on solar energy, a
  renewable, nonpolluting resource.
    Active Heating
• Active solar space heating uses mechanical equipment like fans, pumps,
  blowers, and ducts to collect, store, and distribute heat throughout the
  air/space inside our homes.
• These active solar systems can be either liquid-based or air-based. The
  liquid-based systems use large water tanks to store and distribute the
  heat.
       Types of Active Solar Energy
Active Solar Space Heating
• Active solar space heating uses mechanical equipment like fans, pumps, blowers, and ducts to collect,
  store, and distribute heat throughout the air/space inside our homes.
Active Solar Water Heating
• Active solar water heating systems are used to heat the water in homes. It uses pumps to circulate
  the water or heat-transfer fluid through the system.
Active Solar Pool Heating
In the active solar pool heating, the water from the pool is passed through solar collectors and once it is
heated it is piped back into the pool area. This eliminates the need for storage tanks.
Five key elements of solar passive design
                                                                  There    are     five   important
                                                                  components or mechanisms of a
                                                                  passive solar heating system:
                                                                  apertures, absorbers, thermal
                                                                  mass, distribution, and control.
            •Passive solar aperture (admitting sunlight/solar energy)
            •Passive solar energy control (seasonal needs)
            •Passive solar heat/energy distribution through the building
            •Passive solar absorber to surface absorption of energy for later release
            •Passive solar thermal mass providing heat storage
Absorbers
Absorbers are hard surfaces that are directly in the path of the sun, designed to capture (not reflect) solar energy in the form of heat.
Thermal mass
Thermal mass is the ability of a material to absorb and store heat energy. Thermal mass is often made of materials like brick, stone, and tile, but can
also be water, stored inside an absorber like a dark-colored tank.
Distribution
Distribution of solar heat happens in three primary ways, sometimes aided by fans and blowers:
•   Conduction happens when heat is transferred between two objects in direct contacts, like your bare feet on a hot floor
•   Convection happens when heat is transferred via air or water. Warm air will naturally flow to cooler areas; this is why your food is more thoroughly
    cooked in a convection oven than in a standard microwave
•   Radiation occurs when you feel the heat from sources around you, like your skin on a hot day
Control
Control mechanisms like sunshades, roof overhangs, and blinds provide custom control over the amount of heat entering your home, while insulation
and ventilation methods provide control over heat loss.
Apertures
Apertures are essentially windows or open spaces that have complete, or close to complete, access to the sun, and are ideally south-facing.
Passive systems can be categorized into three types:
Direct Gain - Allows the solar energy to come in through the south-facing window glasses. Wall apertures allow
sunlight to directly enter the building and heat the interior living space.
The glazing should be well insulated to prevent the leakage of heat into the exterior. It is also essential to prevent
brightness and too much heat during summer.
•Indirect Gain - Allows the solar radiation to heat a wall and then the energy is slowly delivered into the
interior of the house. Openings in the wall (called a Trombe Wall), as shown in the figure below, promote
convective currents:
     • Cold room air enters the space between the glass panel and the wall through the bottom opening.
     • As this cold air gets heated, it rises to the top and comes in through the top opening.
Trombe wall
          The thermal storage wall system absorbs and stores heat during the daytime. Excess heat is transferred by air
between wall and glass through the thermosiphon principle (the device uses these forces to create a cyclic fluid flow from
areas of high heat to low heat) into the living space. During the night, vents of the Trombe wall are closed, then heat energy is
circulated into the interior space.
Isolated Gain - The distribution of heat to the house can be accomplished through vents, windows, or doors
from the sunspace to the adjacent home interior. Most homes with isolated gain separate the sunspace from
the home with doors and windows, so the home doesn’t overheat during the summer months. Fans and
operable windows can assist in cooling the sunspace when it is overheating.
Water Wall
The water wall consists of transparent containers filled with water. During the day, the water absorbs and stores the sun’s heat
and disperses it into living space at night.
Roof ponds
Roof ponds are similar to thermal walls. The roof pond is covered with a movable insulated reflective surface, which during
the day bounces off the sun’s rays and maintains a cool temperature inside the house as the pond is filled with cold water.
At night, the pond is left uncovered and is naturally cooled.
During the nighttime, the movable insulation is removed, and the water disperses heat outside the living room.
What is passive cooling?
Passive cooling is where the building design and materials are used to control the temperature in hot
weather.
Cooling buildings is about:
    •    reducing heat gain (for example, by installing insulation and shading windows, walls, and roofs)
    •    increasing heat loss and access to cooling sources (for example, by using earth coupling and
        encouraging air movement).
Cooling people is about:
    • physiological comfort (the physical factors necessary for comfort; for example, encouraging
        breezes to evaporate perspiration and increase body cooling)
    • psychological comfort (psychological factors that affect our perception of comfort, for example,
        levels of adaptation and air movement, radiation, and conduction).
• An earth coupling or ground-coupled heat exchanger is an underground heat exchanger that can
  capture heat from and/or dissipate heat to the ground. They use the Earth's near-constant
  subterranean temperature to warm or cool air or other fluids for residential, agricultural, or industrial
  uses.
• The temperature of the ambient air fluctuates throughout the year but the temperature of the ground at
  a certain depth remains constant throughout the year all around the globe.
Evaporative cooling
This method of cooling is adopted in places where the air is very dry and hot. Here the major problem is
dryness, and so to increase the relative humidity level, water ponds are placed. The space around a
pond is cooled by the removal of latent heat by the evaporating molecules, thus creating a comfortable
space.
Advantages of evaporative cooling over modern air conditioning:
• Lower equipment and installation costs
• Lower operating and power costs (energy savings can be as high as 75 percent)
• Ease of fabrication and installation
• Lower maintenance costs
• Ensures very good ventilation due to the large air flow rates involved
• Very environment-friendly as no harmful chemicals are used
Disadvantages of evaporative cooling over modern air conditioning:
• Not applicable when the low humidity level in a conditioned space is required
• Exact control of temperature and humidity in conditioned space is not possible
• May lead to health problems due to micro-organisms
• A solar chimney is a renewable energy system used to enhance the natural ventilation in a building based on solar and
  wind energy.
• When solar radiation hits the side of the chimney, the air inside the chimney gets heated. If the top exterior vents of the
  chimney remain closed, the heated air moves back into the living space.
• This provides a type of convective air heating. As the air gets cooled in the room, the lighter air tends to move up towards
  the solar chimney, heating it again. This cycle is repeated and the process of heating continues.
Desirable Characteristics of thermal energy storage
                 (TES) materials
                                            Thermal Insulation
Thermal insulation in an air conditioning system is primarily used to reduce heat gain or heat loss from
the piping.
 Insulation Characteristics
     •Low thermal conductivity.
     •Reasonable strength
     •Non-combustible.
     • Resistance to Fouling such as one that is based on ASTM G21 standard.
     • Excellent resistance to ozone
     • Excellent resistance to UV.
     • Does not weaken or corrosion over time.
•Pipe insulation materials can be manufactured from rubber, wool, glass fibers or cork. The
polyurethane or P.U. is a synthetic material that is commonly used these days due to its low thermal
conductivity and other good properties.
Wall Insulation   An external wall insulation system (or EWIS) is a thermally
                  insulated, protective, enhancing exterior cladding procedure
                  involving the use of expanded polystyrene, mineral wool,
                  polyurethane foam, or phenolic foam, topped off with a reinforced
                  cement-based, mineral, or synthetic finish and plaster
The Air cavity wall is composed of two building materials walls separated by an air space. The outer wall is
made of brick and faces the outside of the building structure. The inner wall may be constructed of masonry units
such as concrete blocks, structural clay, brick, or reinforced concrete.
Roof insulation method to prevent heat penetration from the outside environment to the inside of the building. The
method provides temperature stability and prevents unwanted noise penetration. The importance of thermal
insulation has increased recently mainly due to changing insulation standards worldwide, which put higher demands
on the thermal resistance of building structures to reduce energy loss for heating or cooling.
                                                                                         Types of roof insulation materials
  Advantages.
  •   It provides high thermal performance. Gives good mechanical strength
  •   It is resistant to solar radiation. Act as a barrier for air, wind, and moisture
  •   Prevent vapor transmission by applying exterior and interior insulation
  •   Lessens your carbon footprint
Requirements for Ventilation
 • Heat removal: the human body has a thermal efficiency of up to 20%,
   remaining energy send to the atmosphere
 • Supply of oxygen and removal of carbon dioxide
 • Removal of body heat dissipated by the occupants
 • Removal of moisture dissipated by the occupants
 • To provide sufficient air movement and air distribution in occupied
   space
 • To maintain the purity of air by removing odor and dust.
Benefits of ventilation
    Natural ventilation is a method of
    supplying fresh air to a building or room
    by means of passive forces, typically by
    wind speed or differences in pressure
    internally and externally.
    Natural ventilation relies on natural
    forces: wind from the surrounding
    environment as well as buoyancy
    forces that develop due to temperature
    gradients within the building.
The following points should be considered while
providing natural ventilation in a room:
• Doors and windows should be so located that
  they provide maximum in-flow air.
• The height of the room should be sufficient to
  allow air movement.
• Inlet openings should not be obstructed.
                                                             Single-side ventilation involves having
                                                             openings only on one external wall and
                                                             generally towards the wind direction. Air
                                                             exchange     happens     through    wind
                                                             turbulence.
Cross ventilation, openings are located such that the ones at the receptive end allow maximum inflow
of fresh air, and the outlet openings are placed such that the air gets circulated in the space efficiently
and is pushed out with the inflow of fresh air.
Stack ventilation is based on the fact that cooler air is light in weight and hot and stale air is heavier.
Receptive openings are given on the lower sides in the wind-ward directions and for an outlet, openings
are given on the upper side.
                Mechanical Ventilation/Artificial Ventilation:
                                                                              Exit by Exhaust Fan:
                                                                              • In this method, the hot air of a room is
                                                                                  thrown outside the room with the help of
                                                                                  an exhaust fan, and the fresh air enters
                                                                                  through the doors and windows.
                                                                              • The exhaust fan should be set near the
                                                                                  ceiling.
                                                                              ii. Entrance by Exhaust Fan:
                                                                              • In this method, a fan is set on the outer
                                                                                  wall of the room. It pushes fresh air into
                                                                                  the room and throws out the used hot air
                                                                                  of the room through ventilators.
                                                                              • These fans should be installed on the
                                                                                  doors or windows at a height more than
                                                                                  the head of a person.
An energy recovery ventilator (ERV) is a type of mechanical equipment that features a heat exchanger combined with a
ventilation system for providing controlled ventilation into a building. This type of equipment was introduced as ‘air-to-air’
heat exchangers in the colder regions of the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Scandinavia. In these areas, tightly built modern
houses were developing problems with indoor air quality and excessive humidity during the winter.
                  Mechanisms Affecting Natural Ventilation Airflow
Wind-induced airflow is a result of a pressure difference between the outside and inside a structure, or between the surfaces within which
fenestration is located. This pressure gradient may be caused either by the difference in interior-exterior temperature (thermal forces) or by
external wind flow (wind forces).
Thermal forces
When two openings are at different heights and the indoor temperature is higher than the outside, a pressure gradient is generated causing the
inside air to move out of the higher openings and the outside air into the lower openings. The airflow in this regime is dependent on the
temperature difference between inlet and outlet as well as the aperture difference in height.
Wind forces
The difference in dynamic wind pressure creates a potential for the air to flow from a point to another point where the pressure is lower. When
wind strikes a wall perpendicular to its direction of flow, the surface of the wall experiences pressure higher than that of the atmospheric
pressure. The leeward surface experiences pressures lower than that of the atmosphere with less variation in pressure distribution than the
windward side. The side walls however, experience negative pressures around the windward edge and positive pressures at the leeward end
Cross ventilation occurs when a pressure difference exists between two exterior openings, whether they are located in the same or different
surfaces. This pressure difference causes the indoor air to flow from inlet/s to outlet/s located in building walls at lower surface pressure. In
addition, even when the measured pressure difference between the two apertures is equal to zero, some airflow can still occur as a result of
inertia from wind entering the window or from differences in pressure along the height of each window
Natural airflow inside buildings is a combination of the effects of both thermal and wind forces. However, the airflow generated from combing
the two forces does not exceed 40% of the wind flow generated by the greater force even when the two forces are in the same direction.
                           Ventilation
• The objective of the ventilation system is to provide sufficient
  circulation of air to avoid increment in temperature of air in air
  conditioned space and establish an atmosphere in which occupant live
  and work comfortably.
• Ventilation should maintain the relative humidity less than 70%
Ventilation
• Two types of ventilation namely natural ventilation and mechanical
  ventilation systems
• Natural ventilations systems : flow of the air was created because of
  the pressure difference between room and outside
• Mechanical ventilation : flow of the air was created with help of the
  mechanical devices like fan based air conditioning systems
Ventilation- requirements
1. Keep fresh air for respiratory system
2. Maintain the correct level of Oxygen in the air
3. Control the moisture level
4. Lowering the heat
5. Control the Carbon Dioxide
6. Remove the dust and odors
Requirements of ventilations
• Oxygen supply: human body converts chemical energy into mechanical
  energy and dissipates carbon dioxide.
• Each person requires 0.65 m3 of oxygen per hour under normal
  condition and produces 0.2 m3 of carbon dioxide.
CO2 consumption is index of oxygen consumption.
• 2 % of CO2 = difficult to breathe
• 6 % of CO2 = extreme discomfort
• 10 % of CO2 = unconsciousness
  Requirements for Ventilation
• Heat removal: human body has thermal efficiency up to 20%, remaining
  energy will be sent to atmosphere.
• For human comfort, surrounding should capable of absorbing heat liberated
  by human body.
• Even though human at rest, heat is liberated because of internal reaction in
  their body.
• Moisture removal : the moisture loss from the body is nearly 50 grams per
  hour during in rest.
• Human body dispose the heat by evaporation
• High humidity of the air will reduce freshness of air. Relative humidity
  should be less than 70%
     Contd…
• Air motion: increased (higher) air velocity increase the heat transfer from the body.
• The effect of increased velocity is to increase the body heat loss and reduce the feeling of
  discomfort when the ambient air temperature is less than body surface temperature. High
  speed of air will make human to breath difficult
• higher velocity in the range leads to higher evaporation make body comfort.
• Air velocity should be ranging from 6 to 9 m/min at 20oC and 9 to 15 m/min at 22 oC.
• Air motion alone not stand for proper air distribution.
• Air distribution means uniform fresh air supply to air conditioned space.
• Purity of air: the quality of air depends upon the odor, toxic gases and bacteria.
• The evaporation from the body surface add odor to air. So it also depends upon the number
  of person and their age and conditions of people.
• Removal of toxic gases and control of bacteria or removal of bacteria is important task of
  good air conditioning systems
Advantage of Natural Ventilation
1. Does not require any mechanical appliances.
2. No operational cost.
3. No maintenance cost for the appliances/ equipment.
4. Silent processes.
5. Combination of ventilation and lighting which is additional benefit
     Ventilation
• Ventilation as a natural cooling strategy uses
  the physical properties of air to remove heat
  or provide cooling to occupants. In select
  cases, ventilation can be used to cool the
  building structures which subsequently may
  serve as heat sink.
• Cross ventilation – The strategy of cross
  ventilation based on wind to pass through the
  building for the purpose of cooling the
  occupants.
• Cross ventilation requires openings on two
  sides of the space, called the inlet and outlet.
  The sizing and placement of ventilation inlets
  and outlets will determine the direction &
  velocity of cross ventilation through building.
• Generally an equal area of inlet & outlet
  openings must also be provided for suitable
  cross ventilation.
Ventilation
Ventilation
Ventilation
     Stack ventilation in buildings
• Stack ventilation is an
  alternative        design
  strategy that works
  based on the buoyancy
  of warm air to rise and
  exit     through       the
  openings located at
  ceiling height. Cooler
  outside area replaces the
  rising warm air through
  carefully designed inlets
  placed near the floor.
Solar Chimney
Solar Chimney
THERMAL INSULATION
Thermal Insulation
• Materials that insulate well do so because they are poor conductors of
  heat.
• Thermal insulation is an important tool to reduce energy
  consumption in buildings by preventing heat gain/loss through/from
  the building envelope. Thermal insulation is a construction material
  with low thermal conductivity, which should be less than 0.1W/mK
• Ideally, all the surfaces between building and the outside should be
  insulated.
• There are lots of choices for insulation - loose fill (consists of small
  particles of fiber, foam or other materials), batts or rolls of the pink
  stuff (Fiberglass insulation), rigid boards and foam-in-place
  (polyurethane is sprayed into the wall or ceiling cavity).
Thermal insulation
Thermal insulations
Types of insulation material
                           • The HRV also known as the heat recovery air exchangers
                             are equipped with two continuously running fans. The
                             first one expels indoor stale air (saturated with smells,
Heat Recovery ventilator     smoke, pollutants, etc.), and the second one supplies
                             fresh filtered outside air.
                           • The fresh new air and expelled stale air never come into
                             contact with each other; the air is not recycled. This
                             technology captures heat or cooled energy and recycles
                             it; it does not generate it. It can recover heat during
                             winter or cool during summer from the expelled stale air
                             and transfers it to the fresh incoming filtered air.
                           • The available HRV with cross-flow in the Italian market
                             has a varying yield between 70-95% satisfying the actual
                             EU ventilation standard for single family dwellings EN
                             13141-7: 2010.
                           • A frost protection control is activated when the outdoor
                             temperature is below the freezing point 0 °C to prevent
                             the freezing off the heat exchanger core; the HRV is put
                             on a standby mode. The antifreeze solution transfers the
                             warm air towards the core, and the damper closes off the
                             cold airstream. If the outdoor temperature rises again, the
                             unit returns to its normal working mode. The frost
                             protection control prevents the heat exchanger core from
                             freezing