Thermal comfort of a new university building in Luxembourg with passive cooling

peer reviewed ; The new Luxembourgish university buildings should comply with a low energy standard, which was defined for typical offices and smaller lecture rooms by a thermal end-energy lower than 14 kWh/m3a and an electricity use for HVAC and lighting of max. 6 kWh/m3a. Consequently it was necessary to find ways to avoid the need for mechanical ventilation and air-conditioning. The heat consumption was minimized by an air-tight and well insulated building envelope. A difficulty was posed by special outside façade elements which were set-up as a grid over the complete outer surface as an ar... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Thewes, Andreas
Maas, Stefan
Scholzen, Frank
Zürbes, Arno
Waldmann, Danièle
Dokumenttyp: conference paper
Erscheinungsdatum: 2010
Schlagwörter: Thermal comfort / Lighting / Night ventilation / Passive cooling / Engineering / computing & technology / Materials science & engineering / Ingénierie / informatique & technologie / Science des matériaux & ingénierie
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26743897
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/13730

peer reviewed ; The new Luxembourgish university buildings should comply with a low energy standard, which was defined for typical offices and smaller lecture rooms by a thermal end-energy lower than 14 kWh/m3a and an electricity use for HVAC and lighting of max. 6 kWh/m3a. Consequently it was necessary to find ways to avoid the need for mechanical ventilation and air-conditioning. The heat consumption was minimized by an air-tight and well insulated building envelope. A difficulty was posed by special outside façade elements which were set-up as a grid over the complete outer surface as an architectural element. To prevent the risk of overheating during summer, it is necessary to reduce the solar gains by optimizing the window sizes and the glazing types, as well as through the installation of movable indoor shading elements. Nevertheless enough daylight should enter the rooms to limit the consumption of electricity for artificial lighting. Hence detailed dynamic simulations were performed using TRNSYS and TRNFLOW to ensure thermal comfort without active cooling. The effective electricity consumption of a newly installed state-of-the-art lighting system, including presence detectors and daylight controllers for dimming, was measured in a test installation to determine the internal loads by lighting. Radiation and illuminance measurements were performed on sample elements of the façade grid. The results were used to verify the daylight simulations and to analyze the benefits of daylight controllers. Several iterative steps were taken to gradually improve the building by introducing different modifications, e.g. reduction of the window sizes, installation of a lighting control system, improving the night ventilation and effective use of the thermal inertia of the building.