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Numerical modelling and thermal simulation of PCM-gypsum composites with ESP-r

Abstract

The aim of the present work is to refine the ESP-r system by incorporating phase change materials (PCMs) modelling. The behaviour of PCMs is modelled using ESP-r's special materials facility. The effect of phase transition is added to the energy balance equation as a latent heat generation term according to the so-called effective heat capacity method. Numerical simulations were conducted for a multi-zone, highly glazed and naturally ventilated passive solar building. PCM-impregnated gypsum plasterboard was used as an internal room lining. The air, surface and resultant temperatures were compared with the no-PCM case and the diurnal latent heat storage effect was analysed. While this effect did not cause a considerable reduction in the diurnal temperature fluctuation, the PCMs did effectively store solar energy in the transitions periods. Additionally, the energy requirement at the beginning and end of the heating season was estimated and compared with ordinary gypsum wallboard. Within this comparison, the PCM composite solidification temperature was 22 {sup o}C (i.e. 2 K higher than the heating set-point for the room). The results show that solar energy stored in the PCM-gypsum panels can reduce the heating energy demand by up to 90% at times during the heating season. (author)
Authors:
Heim, D; Clarke, J A [1] 
  1. Department of Building Physics and Building Materials, Technical University of Lodz, Lodz (Poland)
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 2004
Product Type:
Journal Article
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Energy and Buildings; Journal Volume: 36; Journal Issue: 8; Other Information: figs., tabs., refs.
Subject:
32 ENERGY CONSERVATION, CONSUMPTION, AND UTILIZATION; 14 SOLAR ENERGY; BUILDINGS; ENERGY STORAGE; ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS; LATENT HEAT STORAGE; SOLAR ARCHITECTURE; GYPSUM; PHASE CHANGE MATERIALS; ENERGY CONSUMPTION; MATHEMATICAL MODELS; COMPUTER CODES; COMPUTER CALCULATIONS; COMPUTERIZED SIMULATION; COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS; NUMERICAL DATA; EVALUATED DATA
OSTI ID:
20670306
Country of Origin:
Netherlands
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 0378-7788; ENEBDR; TRN: NL05ES070
Submitting Site:
CH
Size:
page(s) 795-805
Announcement Date:
Dec 12, 2005

Citation Formats

Heim, D, and Clarke, J A. Numerical modelling and thermal simulation of PCM-gypsum composites with ESP-r. Netherlands: N. p., 2004. Web. doi:10.1016/j.enbuild.2004.01.004.
Heim, D, & Clarke, J A. Numerical modelling and thermal simulation of PCM-gypsum composites with ESP-r. Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2004.01.004
Heim, D, and Clarke, J A. 2004. "Numerical modelling and thermal simulation of PCM-gypsum composites with ESP-r." Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2004.01.004.
@misc{etde_20670306,
title = {Numerical modelling and thermal simulation of PCM-gypsum composites with ESP-r}
author = {Heim, D, and Clarke, J A}
abstractNote = {The aim of the present work is to refine the ESP-r system by incorporating phase change materials (PCMs) modelling. The behaviour of PCMs is modelled using ESP-r's special materials facility. The effect of phase transition is added to the energy balance equation as a latent heat generation term according to the so-called effective heat capacity method. Numerical simulations were conducted for a multi-zone, highly glazed and naturally ventilated passive solar building. PCM-impregnated gypsum plasterboard was used as an internal room lining. The air, surface and resultant temperatures were compared with the no-PCM case and the diurnal latent heat storage effect was analysed. While this effect did not cause a considerable reduction in the diurnal temperature fluctuation, the PCMs did effectively store solar energy in the transitions periods. Additionally, the energy requirement at the beginning and end of the heating season was estimated and compared with ordinary gypsum wallboard. Within this comparison, the PCM composite solidification temperature was 22 {sup o}C (i.e. 2 K higher than the heating set-point for the room). The results show that solar energy stored in the PCM-gypsum panels can reduce the heating energy demand by up to 90% at times during the heating season. (author)}
doi = {10.1016/j.enbuild.2004.01.004}
journal = []
issue = {8}
volume = {36}
place = {Netherlands}
year = {2004}
month = {Jul}
}