Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre

In this study, investigation was conducted to study the use of solid biomass from palm oil mill as insulation material. The experimental study concentrates on using oil palm fiber to determine the unidirectional thermal conductivity, k. The experiment was conducted at different temperature ranges a...

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Main Authors: Hassan S., Tesfamichael Aklilu, Mohd Nor M.F.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2014-07-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141302016
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spelling doaj-7c9358271365465ba16df34c689f9d972021-02-02T06:08:47ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2014-07-01130201610.1051/matecconf/20141302016matecconf_icper2014_02016Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm FibreHassan S.Tesfamichael AkliluMohd Nor M.F. In this study, investigation was conducted to study the use of solid biomass from palm oil mill as insulation material. The experimental study concentrates on using oil palm fiber to determine the unidirectional thermal conductivity, k. The experiment was conducted at different temperature ranges and packing density. The values of k obtained were found to be 0.2 W/m.K to 0.069 W/m.K for a packing density between 66 kg/m3 to 110 kg/m3, and at a temperature between 40ºC to 70ºC. Comparisons were made with others common insulating materials, and it was found that the experimental k values for oil palm waste insulation was lower by between 4 to 56 times for rockwool and between 7 to 57 times for glass fiber at low temperatures. The value k of oil palm fiber however showed an increase at higher temperatures and was lower at lower packing densities. Although not being able to match the k values of common insulators at higher temperatures, other factors such as cost and environmental benefits of using waste material should be taken into consideration and hence encouraging its use as at least a supplement to existing insulation materials http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141302016
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hassan S.
Tesfamichael Aklilu
Mohd Nor M.F.
spellingShingle Hassan S.
Tesfamichael Aklilu
Mohd Nor M.F.
Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Hassan S.
Tesfamichael Aklilu
Mohd Nor M.F.
author_sort Hassan S.
title Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
title_short Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
title_full Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
title_fullStr Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
title_full_unstemmed Comparison Study of Thermal Insulation Characteristics from Oil Palm Fibre
title_sort comparison study of thermal insulation characteristics from oil palm fibre
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2014-07-01
description In this study, investigation was conducted to study the use of solid biomass from palm oil mill as insulation material. The experimental study concentrates on using oil palm fiber to determine the unidirectional thermal conductivity, k. The experiment was conducted at different temperature ranges and packing density. The values of k obtained were found to be 0.2 W/m.K to 0.069 W/m.K for a packing density between 66 kg/m3 to 110 kg/m3, and at a temperature between 40ºC to 70ºC. Comparisons were made with others common insulating materials, and it was found that the experimental k values for oil palm waste insulation was lower by between 4 to 56 times for rockwool and between 7 to 57 times for glass fiber at low temperatures. The value k of oil palm fiber however showed an increase at higher temperatures and was lower at lower packing densities. Although not being able to match the k values of common insulators at higher temperatures, other factors such as cost and environmental benefits of using waste material should be taken into consideration and hence encouraging its use as at least a supplement to existing insulation materials
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141302016
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