Author/Authors :
Michele De Carli، نويسنده , , Massimo Tonon، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
When modelling buildings, solar radiation has a large impact on the thermal balance because it usually heats the rooms. In radiant
systems that are used for heating and cooling buildings, solar radiation has a large influence both on indoor temperatures and on the
efficiency of the radiant system.
Many analyses have already been carried out in order to study how beam and diffuse radiation can be distributed in a room. One of
the most difficult issues, when modelling room thermal balance, is how to simulate the solar radiation when it enters the room, which in
turn depends on the reflectance characteristics of the surface finishing elements.
In this study, four different radiation models have been applied in order to solve an overall detailed, dynamic thermal balance in a
room with pipes embedded in the floor. Two of the models are detailed; the other two consider the radiation entering the room to be
diffuse radiation. As for the behaviour of the impinging solar radiation on the covering materials in a room, measurements have been
carried out to determine the reflectance coefficients, which will be used in simulations for characteristic materials used in buildings.
Results of the simulations show that a simplified model, which considers solar radiation as uniformly distributed in a room, cannot be
used for a detailed comfort analysis; however, when looking at the cooling output of a radiant floor system at the design stage, a simplified
model can predict energy transfer to a certain level of accuracy. Moreover, results coming from combined measurements and simulations
show that the reflectance characteristic of the covering materials does not affect the cooling capacity of the radiant floor systems,
since the most important parameter for cooling performance is the thermal conductivity of the covering layer.
2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Energy modelling , Radiant systems , Measurements of surface reflectance , Solar radiation modelling