Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China

China’s research on and specific implementation of energy saving for buildings are mainly concentrated in urban areas, but according to 2016 statistics, the rural population accounts for 42.65% of the total population, so rural housing has considerable energy-saving potential. However, the degree of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Xingbo Yao, Bart J. Dewancker, Yuang Guo, Shuo Han, Juan Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8687
id doaj-6c7538bd10f44aafa2497ea18c0f8594
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6c7538bd10f44aafa2497ea18c0f85942020-11-25T03:36:57ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-10-01128687868710.3390/su12208687Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, ChinaXingbo Yao0Bart J. Dewancker1Yuang Guo2Shuo Han3Juan Xu4Faculty of Environmental Engineering, The University of Kitakyushu, Kitakyushu 808-0135, JapanFaculty of Environmental Engineering, The University of Kitakyushu, Kitakyushu 808-0135, JapanFaculty of Environmental Engineering, The University of Kitakyushu, Kitakyushu 808-0135, JapanSchool of Communication Engineering, Xidian University, Xi’an 710071, ChinaSchool of Architecture, Chang’an University, Xi’an 710061, ChinaChina’s research on and specific implementation of energy saving for buildings are mainly concentrated in urban areas, but according to 2016 statistics, the rural population accounts for 42.65% of the total population, so rural housing has considerable energy-saving potential. However, the degree of attention to the energy consumption of rural houses needs to be improved. Regarding the research on and implementation of passive energy-saving strategies for residences, compared with centralized urban high-rise residences, rural residences mainly have independent courtyards, with a flexible layout and easier transformation. In this study, a system that uses the common cold lanes in traditional villages and buildings’ exterior walls was constructed, and the indoor spaces of courtyard buildings in southern Shaanxi were completely passively cooled in summer. This system can be completely separated from the supply of artificial energy by relying on the accumulation and buoyancy effects of air in patios and cold lanes and the hot-pressure ventilation in buildings to cool the buildings and greatly improve indoor ventilation efficiency. As the building is ventilated and cooled, the air wall formed in the system can effectively prevent direct contact between the outdoor and indoor temperatures and reduce the impact of thermal wall radiation on the interior. In previous studies on the passive design of courtyard houses, scholars considered the effect of thermal wall radiation on indoor temperature in simulations. Therefore, in this study, we also separately calculated whether to consider the difference between the situation with and without wall heat radiation (WHR) when simulating thermal conversion. The final results show that when the cooling system was adopted, the annual cooling load of the whole building was 4786.494 kW·h without WHR. However, with WHR, the cooling load reduction was 2989.128 kW·h, a difference of 1797.336 kW·h.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8687numerical simulationresidential passive coolingcold lanecourtyard house
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xingbo Yao
Bart J. Dewancker
Yuang Guo
Shuo Han
Juan Xu
spellingShingle Xingbo Yao
Bart J. Dewancker
Yuang Guo
Shuo Han
Juan Xu
Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
Sustainability
numerical simulation
residential passive cooling
cold lane
courtyard house
author_facet Xingbo Yao
Bart J. Dewancker
Yuang Guo
Shuo Han
Juan Xu
author_sort Xingbo Yao
title Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
title_short Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
title_full Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
title_fullStr Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
title_full_unstemmed Study on Passive Ventilation and Cooling Strategies for Cold Lanes and Courtyard Houses—A Case Study of Rural Traditional Village in Shaanxi, China
title_sort study on passive ventilation and cooling strategies for cold lanes and courtyard houses—a case study of rural traditional village in shaanxi, china
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-10-01
description China’s research on and specific implementation of energy saving for buildings are mainly concentrated in urban areas, but according to 2016 statistics, the rural population accounts for 42.65% of the total population, so rural housing has considerable energy-saving potential. However, the degree of attention to the energy consumption of rural houses needs to be improved. Regarding the research on and implementation of passive energy-saving strategies for residences, compared with centralized urban high-rise residences, rural residences mainly have independent courtyards, with a flexible layout and easier transformation. In this study, a system that uses the common cold lanes in traditional villages and buildings’ exterior walls was constructed, and the indoor spaces of courtyard buildings in southern Shaanxi were completely passively cooled in summer. This system can be completely separated from the supply of artificial energy by relying on the accumulation and buoyancy effects of air in patios and cold lanes and the hot-pressure ventilation in buildings to cool the buildings and greatly improve indoor ventilation efficiency. As the building is ventilated and cooled, the air wall formed in the system can effectively prevent direct contact between the outdoor and indoor temperatures and reduce the impact of thermal wall radiation on the interior. In previous studies on the passive design of courtyard houses, scholars considered the effect of thermal wall radiation on indoor temperature in simulations. Therefore, in this study, we also separately calculated whether to consider the difference between the situation with and without wall heat radiation (WHR) when simulating thermal conversion. The final results show that when the cooling system was adopted, the annual cooling load of the whole building was 4786.494 kW·h without WHR. However, with WHR, the cooling load reduction was 2989.128 kW·h, a difference of 1797.336 kW·h.
topic numerical simulation
residential passive cooling
cold lane
courtyard house
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8687
work_keys_str_mv AT xingboyao studyonpassiveventilationandcoolingstrategiesforcoldlanesandcourtyardhousesacasestudyofruraltraditionalvillageinshaanxichina
AT bartjdewancker studyonpassiveventilationandcoolingstrategiesforcoldlanesandcourtyardhousesacasestudyofruraltraditionalvillageinshaanxichina
AT yuangguo studyonpassiveventilationandcoolingstrategiesforcoldlanesandcourtyardhousesacasestudyofruraltraditionalvillageinshaanxichina
AT shuohan studyonpassiveventilationandcoolingstrategiesforcoldlanesandcourtyardhousesacasestudyofruraltraditionalvillageinshaanxichina
AT juanxu studyonpassiveventilationandcoolingstrategiesforcoldlanesandcourtyardhousesacasestudyofruraltraditionalvillageinshaanxichina
_version_ 1724547898405814272