The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate

This paper illustrates the impact of embedding an insulation layer of variable thermal conductivity in a typical building wall on the cooling effect and energy performance. The evaluation was performed by applying a conjugate heat transfer model, which was tested in extremely hot conditions of Al Ai...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Khoukhi Maatouk, Hassan Ahmed, Abdelbaqi Shaimaa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/29/e3sconf_icacer2019_02001.pdf
id doaj-0b450c91ab1042d19283e1e746399dcc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0b450c91ab1042d19283e1e746399dcc2021-04-02T11:41:17ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-011030200110.1051/e3sconf/201910302001e3sconf_icacer2019_02001The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot ClimateKhoukhi MaatoukHassan AhmedAbdelbaqi ShaimaaThis paper illustrates the impact of embedding an insulation layer of variable thermal conductivity in a typical building wall on the cooling effect and energy performance. The evaluation was performed by applying a conjugate heat transfer model, which was tested in extremely hot conditions of Al Ain (UAE). The thermal performance of a building incorporating insulation layers of variable thermal conductivity (k-value) was compared to a non-variable thermal conductivity system by quantifying the additional heat transferred due to the k-relationship with time. The results show that, when the k-value is a function of operating temperature, its effects on the temperature profile through the wall assembly during daytime is significant compared with that obtained when a constant k-value for the polystyrene (EPS) insulation is adopted. A similar trend in the evolution of temperatures during the day and across the wall section was observed when EPS material with different moisture content was evaluated. For the polyurethane insulation, the inner surface temperature reached 44 °C when constant k-value was adopted, increasing to 48.5 °C when the k-value was allowed to vary under the same ambient conditions.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/29/e3sconf_icacer2019_02001.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khoukhi Maatouk
Hassan Ahmed
Abdelbaqi Shaimaa
spellingShingle Khoukhi Maatouk
Hassan Ahmed
Abdelbaqi Shaimaa
The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Khoukhi Maatouk
Hassan Ahmed
Abdelbaqi Shaimaa
author_sort Khoukhi Maatouk
title The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
title_short The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
title_full The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
title_fullStr The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Variable Thermal Conductivity of Insulation Materials on the Building Energy Performance in Hot Climate
title_sort impact of variable thermal conductivity of insulation materials on the building energy performance in hot climate
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This paper illustrates the impact of embedding an insulation layer of variable thermal conductivity in a typical building wall on the cooling effect and energy performance. The evaluation was performed by applying a conjugate heat transfer model, which was tested in extremely hot conditions of Al Ain (UAE). The thermal performance of a building incorporating insulation layers of variable thermal conductivity (k-value) was compared to a non-variable thermal conductivity system by quantifying the additional heat transferred due to the k-relationship with time. The results show that, when the k-value is a function of operating temperature, its effects on the temperature profile through the wall assembly during daytime is significant compared with that obtained when a constant k-value for the polystyrene (EPS) insulation is adopted. A similar trend in the evolution of temperatures during the day and across the wall section was observed when EPS material with different moisture content was evaluated. For the polyurethane insulation, the inner surface temperature reached 44 °C when constant k-value was adopted, increasing to 48.5 °C when the k-value was allowed to vary under the same ambient conditions.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/29/e3sconf_icacer2019_02001.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT khoukhimaatouk theimpactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
AT hassanahmed theimpactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
AT abdelbaqishaimaa theimpactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
AT khoukhimaatouk impactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
AT hassanahmed impactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
AT abdelbaqishaimaa impactofvariablethermalconductivityofinsulationmaterialsonthebuildingenergyperformanceinhotclimate
_version_ 1721571657228746752