Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials

As building codes are pushing towards higher energy efficiency and the arrival of nearly Zero Energy Building (nZEB) requirements for all new buildings are just around the corner the need for alternative, high efficiency heating and cooling solutions for nZEB’s is greater than ever. Also as experien...

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Main Authors: Millers Renars, Korjakins Aleksandrs, Lesinskis Arturs
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/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_01080.pdf
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spelling doaj-17b8f9cff9b546b3bc84987a919f08cb2021-03-02T10:02:11ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-011110108010.1051/e3sconf/201911101080e3sconf_clima2019_01080Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM MaterialsMillers Renars0Korjakins Aleksandrs1Lesinskis Arturs2Institute of Heat, Gas and Water Technology, Riga Technical UniversityInstitute of Materials and Structures, Riga Technical UniversityInstitute of Heat, Gas and Water Technology, Riga Technical UniversityAs building codes are pushing towards higher energy efficiency and the arrival of nearly Zero Energy Building (nZEB) requirements for all new buildings are just around the corner the need for alternative, high efficiency heating and cooling solutions for nZEB’s is greater than ever. Also as experience with renewable energy sources has proven the energy demand and energy generation rarely overlaps and it does not allow to fully utilise some renewable energy sources. This is a simulation study that focuses on integrated cooling and energy storage system utilising phase-change materials (PCM). Several types of thermally activated slabs with different PCM thicknesses were simulated in order to find the most optimal PCM thickness with melting point temperature that can support passive cooling methods based on adiabatic cooling principles. Two calculation tools were used for the study – IDA ICE 4.8 and U-NORM 2012-2 to calculate the properties of the slabs and potential of application in well insulated residential building in Baltic climate. The results showed that the optimal thickness for thermally activated PCM layer (large flat containers) range from 25 mm to 90 mm, and for layers with no thermal activation – 180 mm and more. Moreover the results show that apart from energy storage the thermally activated panel can increase thermal comfort conditions.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_01080.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Millers Renars
Korjakins Aleksandrs
Lesinskis Arturs
spellingShingle Millers Renars
Korjakins Aleksandrs
Lesinskis Arturs
Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Millers Renars
Korjakins Aleksandrs
Lesinskis Arturs
author_sort Millers Renars
title Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
title_short Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
title_full Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
title_fullStr Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
title_full_unstemmed Thermally Activated Concrete Slabs with Integrated PCM Materials
title_sort thermally activated concrete slabs with integrated pcm materials
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description As building codes are pushing towards higher energy efficiency and the arrival of nearly Zero Energy Building (nZEB) requirements for all new buildings are just around the corner the need for alternative, high efficiency heating and cooling solutions for nZEB’s is greater than ever. Also as experience with renewable energy sources has proven the energy demand and energy generation rarely overlaps and it does not allow to fully utilise some renewable energy sources. This is a simulation study that focuses on integrated cooling and energy storage system utilising phase-change materials (PCM). Several types of thermally activated slabs with different PCM thicknesses were simulated in order to find the most optimal PCM thickness with melting point temperature that can support passive cooling methods based on adiabatic cooling principles. Two calculation tools were used for the study – IDA ICE 4.8 and U-NORM 2012-2 to calculate the properties of the slabs and potential of application in well insulated residential building in Baltic climate. The results showed that the optimal thickness for thermally activated PCM layer (large flat containers) range from 25 mm to 90 mm, and for layers with no thermal activation – 180 mm and more. Moreover the results show that apart from energy storage the thermally activated panel can increase thermal comfort conditions.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_01080.pdf
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AT korjakinsaleksandrs thermallyactivatedconcreteslabswithintegratedpcmmaterials
AT lesinskisarturs thermallyactivatedconcreteslabswithintegratedpcmmaterials
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