Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters

Despite their great significance, lightweight structures have poor thermal inertia. In order to enhance the thermal comfort inside such buildings, architects need lightweight thermal storage. In this paper a model was used to experimentally investigate Heating Load profiles in lightweight shelters....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alkhalidi Ammar, Zaytoun Yara Nidal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-01-01
Series:Environmental and Climate Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/rtuect-2020-0009
id doaj-c0ecb7e2269646a0a0a51c1d20a35b0c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c0ecb7e2269646a0a0a51c1d20a35b0c2021-09-05T14:01:32ZengSciendoEnvironmental and Climate Technologies2255-88372020-01-0124114316110.2478/rtuect-2020-0009rtuect-2020-0009Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable SheltersAlkhalidi Ammar0Zaytoun Yara Nidal1Energy Engineering Department, German Jordanian University, Amman11180, JordanEnergy Engineering Department, German Jordanian University, Amman11180, JordanDespite their great significance, lightweight structures have poor thermal inertia. In order to enhance the thermal comfort inside such buildings, architects need lightweight thermal storage. In this paper a model was used to experimentally investigate Heating Load profiles in lightweight shelters. The profiles were created for the climate in Jordan, then simulated for other climate zones. The proposed design concept was used to create a replacement for a thermal mass in lightweight structures such as shelters; by combining passive solar gain with energy storage embodied within the shelter floor (thermal-floor) to absorb solar radiation. This shelter design decreased the Heating Load during the winter season by acting as heat storage that releases energy at night time after being exposed to solar radiation during the day. The passive design depends on shading elements and overhangs shades to control solar gain during different seasons to prevent overheating during the summer. An experimental investigation of this model was performed to validate the simulation results. Validated simulation results showed that the designed thermal-floor is 25 % of the total shelter’s floor area, which was crucial for obtaining favourable results. With CO2 as a thermal mass, heat load was reduced up to 68 % compared to a 20 cm concrete slab floor. The use of this thermal storage material yielded a reduction in annual heating demand by 85 kWh/m2.https://doi.org/10.2478/rtuect-2020-0009comfort zonejordan weather sustainabilitylightweight shelterthermal mass
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alkhalidi Ammar
Zaytoun Yara Nidal
spellingShingle Alkhalidi Ammar
Zaytoun Yara Nidal
Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
Environmental and Climate Technologies
comfort zone
jordan weather sustainability
lightweight shelter
thermal mass
author_facet Alkhalidi Ammar
Zaytoun Yara Nidal
author_sort Alkhalidi Ammar
title Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
title_short Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
title_full Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
title_fullStr Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
title_full_unstemmed Reuse Waste Material and Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Save Energy and Approach Sustainable Lightweight Portable Shelters
title_sort reuse waste material and carbon dioxide emissions to save energy and approach sustainable lightweight portable shelters
publisher Sciendo
series Environmental and Climate Technologies
issn 2255-8837
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Despite their great significance, lightweight structures have poor thermal inertia. In order to enhance the thermal comfort inside such buildings, architects need lightweight thermal storage. In this paper a model was used to experimentally investigate Heating Load profiles in lightweight shelters. The profiles were created for the climate in Jordan, then simulated for other climate zones. The proposed design concept was used to create a replacement for a thermal mass in lightweight structures such as shelters; by combining passive solar gain with energy storage embodied within the shelter floor (thermal-floor) to absorb solar radiation. This shelter design decreased the Heating Load during the winter season by acting as heat storage that releases energy at night time after being exposed to solar radiation during the day. The passive design depends on shading elements and overhangs shades to control solar gain during different seasons to prevent overheating during the summer. An experimental investigation of this model was performed to validate the simulation results. Validated simulation results showed that the designed thermal-floor is 25 % of the total shelter’s floor area, which was crucial for obtaining favourable results. With CO2 as a thermal mass, heat load was reduced up to 68 % compared to a 20 cm concrete slab floor. The use of this thermal storage material yielded a reduction in annual heating demand by 85 kWh/m2.
topic comfort zone
jordan weather sustainability
lightweight shelter
thermal mass
url https://doi.org/10.2478/rtuect-2020-0009
work_keys_str_mv AT alkhalidiammar reusewastematerialandcarbondioxideemissionstosaveenergyandapproachsustainablelightweightportableshelters
AT zaytounyaranidal reusewastematerialandcarbondioxideemissionstosaveenergyandapproachsustainablelightweightportableshelters
_version_ 1717810086684917760