Week 09 Ch09 Heat Flow 1
Week 09 Ch09 Heat Flow 1
Week 09 Ch09 Heat Flow 1
9 Heat Flow
9.1 The building envelope
9.2 Building envelope design intentions
9.3 Sensible heat flow through opaque walls and roofs
9.4 Latent heat flow through the opaque envelope
9.5 Heat flow through transparent/translucent elements
9.6 Trends in envelope thermal performance
9.7 Heat flow via air movement
9.8 Calculating envelope heat flows
9.9 Envelope thermal design standards
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Building envelope
Envelope = exterior enclosure consisting of materials and components
The envelope is more than a surface. The envelope is not merely a 2D
exterior surface, but a 3D transition space. (Fig.9.1)
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Building Envelope Design
Basic components:
windows, doors, floors, Ethnic names
walls, roofs
Windows: skylights,
clerestories, screens,
shutters, drapes, blinds,
glass, etc.
Open frame or closed
shell approach
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Basics for heat flow
Sensible heat: a form of energy that flows whenever
there is a temperature difference and that manifests
itself as an internal energy of atomic vibration within
all materials.
Temperature is an indication of the extent of such vibration,
essentially the ‘density’ of heat within a material.
Sensible heat flow results in a change in temperature
Latent heat: sensible heat used to change the state
of water (evaporate or condense).
Latent heat flow results in a phase change, e.g., moisture
content (often humidity of the air).
Total heat flow = sensible + latent heat flow
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Heat content of air
Total heat (enthalpy) = sensible + latent
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Static versus dynamic
Static = steady state
Key determinant: resistance
Dynamic = unsteady, transient
Key determinant: capacitance
6
Heat flow process
Heat flows from the hotter to the
colder.
Moisture flows from area of the
greater concentration to area of the
lesser concentration.
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Three modes in heat transfer
Conduction: heat transfer directly from molecule to molecule,
within or between materials, with proximity of molecules
(material density) playing a critical role in the extent of heat
transfer
T1 T2
q kA
L
Low k material
Insulation slows
conduction
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Convection
Heat exchange between a fluid
(typically air) and a solid, with motion
of the fluid due to heating or cooling
playing a critical role in the extent of
heat transfer
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Radiation
Heat flows via electro-magnetic waves from
hotter surfaces to detached colder ones -
across empty space and potentially great
distances. (with nothing solid or opaque in
between)
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Thermal properties of components
Conductivity (k): the
number of Watts that
flow through 1 square
meter(m2) of material
1m thick when the
temperature difference
across that material is
1°K (equal to 1°C)
Unit: W/m°K
Conductance (C): the
number of Watts that
flow through 1 square
meter(m2) of a given
thickness of material
when the temperature
difference is 1°C
Unit: W/m2°K
Appendix Table E.1
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Absorptivity vs. Absorptance
The ending “ivity” denotes a property of the bulk material
independent of geometry or surface condition.
The suffix “ance” denotes a property of a piece of material
(an actual piece of material) as it exists.
Thus, emittance, reflectance, absorptance, and
transmittance refer to actual pieces of material.
For example, the emittance is a function of the material,
the condition of its surface, and the temperature of the
surface.
ASHRAE F.2001. 3.8
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Resistance (R)
The reciprocal of conductivity or
conductance
A measure of how effective any material is
as an insulator (the greater R, the more
effective the insulator)
Table E.1: k, C, R
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Blackbody radiation
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Emittance
Defined as the ratio of the radiation emitted
by a given material to that emitted by a
blackbody at the same temperature
A measure of how efficiently a surface emits
energy relative to a blackbody
The lower the emittance, the lower the
radiative heat exchange
Low-e glass
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Power:
instantaneous flow
of energy at a
given time (HP,
W[J/S], Btu/h)
Energy: power
usage over time
(Btu, J, Wh)
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Thermal classifications of materials
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EIFS: known as Dryvit (드라이비트 공법)
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