Eduardo Gascón Alvarez, Kiley Feickert, Mohamed A. Ismail, Caitlin T. Mueller, Leslie K. Norford
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Integrated urban heat sinks for low-carbon neighbourhoods: dissipating heat to the ground and sky through building structures
In a global context of simultaneous urbanization and rising ambient temperatures, it is imperative to design heat-resilient and material-efficient neighbourhoods that respond to the pressing demand for housing with minimal environmental impact. With this goal in mind, the work presented here focuses on the integration of heat dissipation systems within structural building components, introducing a novel framework for their systems-level simulation and design. Two well-studied, low-cost systems (shallow geothermal and night-sky cooling) are modelled within a parametric design workflow that combines bottom-up structural embodied carbon calculations with annual building energy simulations that account for heat sink availability. The proposed method results in a fast and reliable early-stage design tool that allows urban planners, policymakers, and designers to evaluate the suitability of available heat dissipation technologies across climates and urban morphologies. This paper analyzes specifically the multi-domain performance of a hypothetical urban geometry within three different cooling-dominated locations (Algiers, Cairo, and Bangkok).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Building Performance Simulation (JBPS) aims to make a substantial and lasting contribution to the international building community by supporting our authors and the high-quality, original research they submit. The journal also offers a forum for original review papers and researched case studies
We welcome building performance simulation contributions that explore the following topics related to buildings and communities:
-Theoretical aspects related to modelling and simulating the physical processes (thermal, air flow, moisture, lighting, acoustics).
-Theoretical aspects related to modelling and simulating conventional and innovative energy conversion, storage, distribution, and control systems.
-Theoretical aspects related to occupants, weather data, and other boundary conditions.
-Methods and algorithms for optimizing the performance of buildings and communities and the systems which service them, including interaction with the electrical grid.
-Uncertainty, sensitivity analysis, and calibration.
-Methods and algorithms for validating models and for verifying solution methods and tools.
-Development and validation of controls-oriented models that are appropriate for model predictive control and/or automated fault detection and diagnostics.
-Techniques for educating and training tool users.
-Software development techniques and interoperability issues with direct applicability to building performance simulation.
-Case studies involving the application of building performance simulation for any stage of the design, construction, commissioning, operation, or management of buildings and the systems which service them are welcomed if they include validation or aspects that make a novel contribution to the knowledge base.