Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels
Previous studies show that climate change has an impact on the damage risks in solid masonry facades. To conserve these valuable buildings, it is important to determine the projected change in damages for the original and internally insulated cases. Since historical masonry covers a wide range of pr...
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Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/11/3/134 |
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doaj-ebacd97c0887411a9c8cd382c5b3c4ff2021-03-24T00:07:05ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092021-03-011113413410.3390/buildings11030134Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in BrusselsIsabeau Vandemeulebroucke0Steven Caluwaerts1Nathan Van Den Bossche2Building Physics Group, Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Ghent University, 9000 Ghent, BelgiumAtmospheric Physics Group, Faculty of Sciences, Ghent University, 9000 Ghent, BelgiumBuilding Physics Group, Faculty of Engineering and Architecture, Ghent University, 9000 Ghent, BelgiumPrevious studies show that climate change has an impact on the damage risks in solid masonry facades. To conserve these valuable buildings, it is important to determine the projected change in damages for the original and internally insulated cases. Since historical masonry covers a wide range of properties, it is unknown how sensitive the climate change impact is to variations in different parameters, such as wall thickness, brick type, etc. A factorial study is performed to determine the climate change impact on freeze-thaw risk, mould growth and wood decay in solid masonry in Brussels, Belgium. It is found that the critical orientation equals the critical wind-driven rain orientation and does not change over time. Further, the freeze-thaw risk is generally decreasing, whereas the change in mould growth and wood decay depends on the climate scenario. Knowing the brick type and rain exposure coefficient is most important when assessing the climate change impact. For freeze-thaw risk and wood decay, it is found that simulating one wall thickness for the uninsulated and one insulated case is sufficient to represent the climate change impact. Finally, the effects of climate change generally do not compensate for the increase in damage after the application of internal insulation.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/11/3/134climate changesensitivity analysisinterior insulationhistorical brickfreeze-thaw damagemould growth |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Isabeau Vandemeulebroucke Steven Caluwaerts Nathan Van Den Bossche |
spellingShingle |
Isabeau Vandemeulebroucke Steven Caluwaerts Nathan Van Den Bossche Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels Buildings climate change sensitivity analysis interior insulation historical brick freeze-thaw damage mould growth |
author_facet |
Isabeau Vandemeulebroucke Steven Caluwaerts Nathan Van Den Bossche |
author_sort |
Isabeau Vandemeulebroucke |
title |
Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels |
title_short |
Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels |
title_full |
Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels |
title_fullStr |
Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels |
title_full_unstemmed |
Factorial Study on the Impact of Climate Change on Freeze-Thaw Damage, Mould Growth and Wood Decay in Solid Masonry Walls in Brussels |
title_sort |
factorial study on the impact of climate change on freeze-thaw damage, mould growth and wood decay in solid masonry walls in brussels |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Buildings |
issn |
2075-5309 |
publishDate |
2021-03-01 |
description |
Previous studies show that climate change has an impact on the damage risks in solid masonry facades. To conserve these valuable buildings, it is important to determine the projected change in damages for the original and internally insulated cases. Since historical masonry covers a wide range of properties, it is unknown how sensitive the climate change impact is to variations in different parameters, such as wall thickness, brick type, etc. A factorial study is performed to determine the climate change impact on freeze-thaw risk, mould growth and wood decay in solid masonry in Brussels, Belgium. It is found that the critical orientation equals the critical wind-driven rain orientation and does not change over time. Further, the freeze-thaw risk is generally decreasing, whereas the change in mould growth and wood decay depends on the climate scenario. Knowing the brick type and rain exposure coefficient is most important when assessing the climate change impact. For freeze-thaw risk and wood decay, it is found that simulating one wall thickness for the uninsulated and one insulated case is sufficient to represent the climate change impact. Finally, the effects of climate change generally do not compensate for the increase in damage after the application of internal insulation. |
topic |
climate change sensitivity analysis interior insulation historical brick freeze-thaw damage mould growth |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/11/3/134 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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