Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis

A three-dimensional numerical model was built to estimate the heat transfer between the soil and a shallow basement in four different climates (cold, temperate, semi-arid and arid climates) for, respectively, conditioned and unconditioned cases. The governing heat transfer equation in soil and basem...

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Main Authors: Naima Sakami, Lahcen Boukhattem, Hassan Hamdi, Brahim Benhamou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Cogent Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1602926
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spelling doaj-e96a2849330143e8a3b74a536114a73e2021-03-02T14:46:49ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Engineering2331-19162019-01-016110.1080/23311916.2019.16029261602926Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysisNaima Sakami0Lahcen Boukhattem1Hassan Hamdi2Brahim Benhamou3Cadi Ayyad UniversityCadi Ayyad UniversityCadi Ayyad UniversityCadi Ayyad UniversityA three-dimensional numerical model was built to estimate the heat transfer between the soil and a shallow basement in four different climates (cold, temperate, semi-arid and arid climates) for, respectively, conditioned and unconditioned cases. The governing heat transfer equation in soil and basement was solved by the finite difference method using the alternating-direction implicit scheme (ADI). The air temperature for the case of conditioned shallow basement was maintained constant while it was computed for the case of unconditioned cellar using energy balance equation. The effects of the basement geometry, soil types and climatic conditions on the thermal behavior of the conditioned and unconditioned shallow basement were carried out. The heat losses and isotherms analysis showed that the heat flux is more significant through the walls than the basement floor and occurred mainly in the walls-floor edges. Furthermore, lowering the thermal diffusivity of the soil leads to a decrease in the shallow basement heating load. Our results show that the shallow basement as expected is more beneficial in hot climates than in cold ones. It was also brought to light that the basement thermal load is dependent on the soil type in temperate climates.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1602926shallow basementsoil typesconditionedunconditionedheat flowthermal loadclimate zones
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Naima Sakami
Lahcen Boukhattem
Hassan Hamdi
Brahim Benhamou
spellingShingle Naima Sakami
Lahcen Boukhattem
Hassan Hamdi
Brahim Benhamou
Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
Cogent Engineering
shallow basement
soil types
conditioned
unconditioned
heat flow
thermal load
climate zones
author_facet Naima Sakami
Lahcen Boukhattem
Hassan Hamdi
Brahim Benhamou
author_sort Naima Sakami
title Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
title_short Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
title_full Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
title_fullStr Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of Morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
title_sort comparison of shallow basement thermal performance for different regions of morocco using a three-dimensional heat transfer analysis
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Engineering
issn 2331-1916
publishDate 2019-01-01
description A three-dimensional numerical model was built to estimate the heat transfer between the soil and a shallow basement in four different climates (cold, temperate, semi-arid and arid climates) for, respectively, conditioned and unconditioned cases. The governing heat transfer equation in soil and basement was solved by the finite difference method using the alternating-direction implicit scheme (ADI). The air temperature for the case of conditioned shallow basement was maintained constant while it was computed for the case of unconditioned cellar using energy balance equation. The effects of the basement geometry, soil types and climatic conditions on the thermal behavior of the conditioned and unconditioned shallow basement were carried out. The heat losses and isotherms analysis showed that the heat flux is more significant through the walls than the basement floor and occurred mainly in the walls-floor edges. Furthermore, lowering the thermal diffusivity of the soil leads to a decrease in the shallow basement heating load. Our results show that the shallow basement as expected is more beneficial in hot climates than in cold ones. It was also brought to light that the basement thermal load is dependent on the soil type in temperate climates.
topic shallow basement
soil types
conditioned
unconditioned
heat flow
thermal load
climate zones
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311916.2019.1602926
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AT hassanhamdi comparisonofshallowbasementthermalperformancefordifferentregionsofmoroccousingathreedimensionalheattransferanalysis
AT brahimbenhamou comparisonofshallowbasementthermalperformancefordifferentregionsofmoroccousingathreedimensionalheattransferanalysis
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