Trombe wall is a passive strategy that reduces the energy consumption in buildings and helps for sustainable development of the residential sector. Applying these walls is very important in areas that need heating load in winter. This study evaluates a set of Trombe walls for the energy management of a residential building under real conditions in Binalood region with a cold and dry climate. In order to study the potentials of the Trombe wall, four different designs, including cubic Trombe wall with rectangular structure and three-sided glass, Trombe wall with trapezoidal structure and three-sided glass, Trombe wall with trapezoidal structure and four-sided glass, and Trombe wall with thicker storage wall, trapezoidal structure, and three-sided glass, for Trombe wall are considered. Trombe walls of all four suggested designs are exposed to outdoor conditions and installed at 17 places on the southern walls of the residential building. The results show that the most optimal design, i.e., Trombe wall with thicker storage wall, trapezoidal structure, and three-sided glass, leads to the greatest decrease (1637 kWh) in heating load in January. In addition, this design of the Trombe wall has the greatest effect in increasing the indoor air temperature among other Trombe walls investigated in this study. The Trombe wall with thicker storage wall, trapezoidal structure, and three-sided glass with a storage wall thickness of 40 cm is able to reduce the heating load of the building by 5.59 MWh in 5 months. This plan reduces the energy demand of the building by 8% more than the conventional structure of Trombe wall.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-023-27039-5 | DOI Listing |
Heliyon
October 2024
Department of Home Economics, Faculty of Science and Arts in Tihama, King Khalid University, Muhayil Asir, 61913, Saudi Arabia.
Indoor air pollutants and airborne contamination removal have been challenging in healthcare facilities. The airborne transmission control and HVAC system may collapse in hospitals due to the highly infectious respiratory disease-associated patient surge, like COVID-19. Common air filtration systems and HVAC systems enhance the patients' comfort and support indoor hygiene, hitherto insufficient to control highly infectious airborne pathogens and hospital-borne pollutants such as radon, PM, patient droplets, VOC, high CO, and anesthetic gases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
April 2024
Department of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town 7535, South Africa.
An experimental passive solar thermal transmission wall (also known as Trombe wall) prototype was installed on a factory building wall in Kalnciems, Latvia to carry out temperature measurements at different representative locations in order to evaluate Trombe wall's potential to be used as a secondary space heating source. The average winter temperature in Kalnciems is 0.7 °C which stipulates the need for space heating (6-7 months a year).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
July 2024
Department of Mechanical and Aeronautical Engineering, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
The use of alternative energy sources, particularly solar energy, in buildings is rising and spreading around the globe. In this paper, a solar wall is analyzed using a numerical method. On the wall, a number of obstacles are placed in two shapes, rectangular (REC) and semicircular (SEC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
June 2023
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Semnan University, Semnan, Iran.
Trombe wall is a passive strategy that reduces the energy consumption in buildings and helps for sustainable development of the residential sector. Applying these walls is very important in areas that need heating load in winter. This study evaluates a set of Trombe walls for the energy management of a residential building under real conditions in Binalood region with a cold and dry climate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnergy Build
July 2022
Civil and Infrastructure Engineering, School of Engineering, RMIT University, Melbourne 3004, Australia.
Natural ventilation is considered the first suggestion for COVID-19 prevention in buildings by the World Health Organization (WHO). Solar chimney's viability in aged care centers or similar facilities was analyzed numerically and theoretically. A new solar chimney design was proposed to reduce the cross-infection risk of COVID-19 based on an airflow path through window, ceiling vent, attic, and then chimney cavity.
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