Energy Retrofitting of a Buildings’ Envelope: Assessment of the Environmental, Economic and Energy (3E) Performance of a Cork-Based Thermal Insulating Rendering Mortar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. State-of-the-Art on the LCA of Building Envelope
- In Portugal, seven exterior wall alternatives with almost the same thermal performance, and seven different heating systems, were considered in the calculation of the LCA of a house. The study period was defined as 50 years, including the production stage and the heating energy and maintenance actions [7]. Two external claddings’ alternatives (stone claddings and renders) were compared in terms of environmental LCA and service life prediction [8], in another study completed in the same country;
- In Indonesia, a life cycle energy assessment study regarding middle- to high-class residential high-rise apartments in Jakarta identified the best alternatives among common wall types regarding the energy consumption from cradle to the use phase over a 40-year study period [5];
- In Lebanon, a multiscale life cycle energy analysis framework was used to determine the profile of energy use of new residential buildings by considering embodied, operational and user transportation energy requirements, over 50 years. It also identified the most effective ways to reduce energy use along the various life cycle stages, and at different scales, of the built environment [11];
- In Spain, an LCA study compared five constructive systems for the building envelope of a modular house: hollow brick; hollow brick with Phase Changing Materials (PCM); conventional brick; conventional brick with polyurethane insulation and PCM; conventional brick with polyurethane insulation [12]. The environmental impacts over an 80-year study period were considered for each alternative;
- In Italy, alternative envelope solutions, including type and width of masonry and insulating materials, were considered in the LCA study of a conventional house and an office building [13].
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. 3E-C2C Method
3.1.1. Environmental Performance
- Product Stage (A1–A3): For each product or construction material, the inventory of the LCA data of the production resulted either from the studies completed in Portuguese plants [14] or from the application of Native LCA in the selection of coherent LCA data sets on TIRM to be used [26]. The composition considered for this product was based on a Portuguese producer [2]. The LCA of the production of each construction material (cradle-to-gate approach) was calculated with SimaPro and environmental impact results were achieved by using an environmental impact assessment method with a mid-point approach—CML 2001 baseline method;
- Construction process stage (A4–A5): The thermal retrofit includes the installation of the product in the building: removal, and transportation to waste processing and disposal, of the old render and paint; external and/or internal rendering of the external wall with TIRM, and application of the corresponding coating;
- Use stage—maintenance, repair and replacement (B2–B4): During the study period, the environmental impacts of the materials applied in replacement, repair and maintenance operations, and of the corresponding waste flows, were considered;
- Use stage—energy cost (B6): The energy performance is based on the estimation of the energy needs for heating and cooling during the buildings’ operation. These needs are then divided by the total area of external wall to result in a value related to the declared unit considered. This value, and the corresponding environmental impacts, are based on the residential consumption for heating and cooling considering an updated Portuguese electricity mix [27];
- End-of-life stage (C): The transportation of the discarded product as part of the waste processing and transportation of waste (C2), the waste processing (C3) and the waste disposal, including physical pre-treatment and management of the disposal site (C4) are considered; since the environmental impacts of demolition (C1) are similar for all alternatives, they are not considered.
3.1.2. Economic Performance
- Product and construction process stages (A1–A5): For the installation of the TIRM in the building, the cost of the renovation described in the construction process as to be considered, except for the costs of workmanship to remove the old render and the paint and for the costs of installation of any scaffolding, on the external surface of the external wall, to complete this operation. These costs were collected from: a Portuguese producer of TIRM with cork as a lightweight aggregate [1]; previous research studies [29]; construction firms, market surveys and building materials suppliers [18]; reference national documents [30];
- Use stage—maintenance, repair and replacement (B2–B4): The cost of replacement, repair and maintenance operations completed in each year defines the economic cost of this stage in year “n” per square metre of external wall;
4. 3E Assessment of Energy Retrofitting Alternatives
4.1. Carbon and Energy Consumption Balances
4.2. Economic Costs and Benefits
4.3. Energy Savings in Heating and Cooling
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wall Type | Insulation Material | Designation | Thickness (m) | U-Value [W/(m2 °C)] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Interior | Exterior | Total | ||||
Single Leaf | − | W1 | − | − | 0.26 | 1.36 |
TIRM | W3 | 0.10 | − | 0.34 | 0.57 | |
TIRM | W4 | 0.15 | − | 0.39 | 0.44 | |
TIRM | W6 | 0.10 | 0.10 | 0.42 | 0.36 | |
TIRM | W7 | 0.15 | 0.15 | 0.52 | 0.26 | |
TIRM | W8 | − | 0.04 | 0.88 | 0.28 | |
TIRM | W9 | − | 0.10 | 0.34 | 0.57 | |
TIRM | W10 | − | 0.15 | 0.39 | 0.44 | |
Cavity Wall | − | W11 | − | − | 0.35 | 0.95 |
TIRM | W13 | 0.10 | − | 0.43 | 0.48 | |
TIRM | W14 | 0.15 | − | 0.45 | 0.36 | |
TIRM | W16 | 0.10 | 0.10 | 0.51 | 0.32 | |
TIRM | W17 | 0.15 | 0.15 | 0.58 | 0.23 | |
TIRM | W18 | − | 0.04 | 0.62 | 0.34 | |
TIRM | W19 | − | 0.10 | 0.43 | 0.48 | |
TIRM | W20 | − | 0.15 | 0.45 | 0.36 |
Cladding or Coating | Maintenance, Repair and Replacement Operations |
---|---|
ECS1—Adherent (0.02-m-thick render; water-based paint) | Total cleaning and repainting every 5 years and, after 25 years, repair of 35% of the area. |
ECS2—Thermal insulating rendering mortar with cork and water-based paint | |
ICS1—Adherent (0.02-m-thick render; water-based paint) | Total cleaning and repainting every 5 years and, after 10 years, repair of 5% of the area. |
ICS2—Thermal insulating rendering mortar with cork and water-based paint |
LCA Boundaries | Life Cycle Stages/LCA Information Modules | Life Cycle Stage Designation and Description | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cradle to Cradle | Cradle to Grave | Cradle to Gate | Product Stage (A1–A3) | A1 | Raw material extraction and processing, processing of secondary material input |
A2 | Transportation to the manufacturer | ||||
A3 | Manufacturing | ||||
Gate to Grave | Construction process stage (A4, A5) | A4 | Transportation to the building site | ||
A5 | Installation in the building | ||||
Use stage - information modules related to the building fabric (B1–B5) | B1 | Use or application of the installed product | |||
B2 | Maintenance | ||||
B3 | Repair | ||||
B4 | Replacement | ||||
B5 | Refurbishment | ||||
Use stage—information modules related to the operation of the building (B6, B7) | B6 | Operational energy use | |||
B7 | Operational water use | ||||
End-of-life stage (C1–C4) | C1 | D-construction, demolition | |||
C2 | Transport to waste processing | ||||
C3 | Waste processing for reuse, recover and/or recycling (3R) | ||||
C4 | Disposal | ||||
Benefits and loads beyond the system boundary (D) | D | Reuse, recovery and/or recycling (3R) potentials |
Equation | Unit | List of Abbreviations |
---|---|---|
(€/m2) | - , cost in year n (€/m2); - d, real discount rate applied (3%), without considering risk. | |
(€/declared unit) | − | |
(€/year *m2 of external wall) | - T, cost of 1 kWh of electricity in Portugal, for household consumers, without VAT or standing charges (€/kWh) (0.139 €/kWh, for an installation of more than 2.3 kVA); - , nominal annual heating needs per square metre of net floor area of the flat (kWh/m2 *year); - , nominal efficiency of the heating equipment (which is 1, considering the reference value [32]); - , nominal annual cooling needs per square metre of net floor area of the flat (kWh/m2 *year); - , nominal efficiency of the cooling equipment (which is 3, considering the reference value [32]); - , net floor area of the flat assessed (129.96 m2); - , total area of the external wall assessed (40.27 m2). |
Approach | Life Cycle Stages Considered | Performance Aspects | Heating and Cooling Needs Fulfilled (%) | Best Performance | Difference to the Second and to the Reference Alternatives |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LCA: GWP | C2C (A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; C2–C4 and D), without energy use for heating and cooling | Environmental | − | W1 (no renovation) | 310% (W2/W8) |
LCA: PE-NRe | 110% (W2/W8) | ||||
LCA: GWP | C2C (A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; B6; C2–C4 and D) | Environmental | 10 | W8 | 1% (W9); 11% (W1) |
30 | W10 | 1% (W9); 21% (W1) | |||
50 | 1% (W9); 24% (W1) | ||||
LCA: PE-NRe | 10 | W9 | 1% (W10); 17% (W1) | ||
30 | W10 | 2% (W9); 24% (W1) | |||
50 | 3% (W7/W9); 26% (W1) | ||||
WLC | A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; B6; C2–C4 and D | Economic | 10 | W1 (no renovation) | 15% (W8) |
Approach | Life Cycle Stages Considered | Performance Aspects | Heating and Cooling Needs Fulfilled (%) | Best Performance | Difference to the Second and to the Reference Alternatives |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LCA: GWP | C2C (A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; C2–C4 and D), without energy use for heating and cooling | Environmental | − | W11 (no renovation) | 310% (W12/W18) |
LCA: PE-NRe | 111% (W12) | ||||
LCA: GWP | C2C (A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; B6; C2–C4 and D) | Environmental | 10 | W18 | 4% (W11) |
30 | W20 | 0% (W19); 9% (W11) | |||
50 | 1% (W19); 12% (W1) | ||||
LCA: PE-NRe | 10 | W18 | 0% (W19); 6% (W11) | ||
30 | W20 | 1% (W19); 12% (W11) | |||
50 | 2% (W19); 14% (W1) | ||||
WLC | A1–A3; A4; A5; B2–B4; B6; C2–C4 and D | Economic | 10 | W11 (no renovation) | 19% (W18) |
30 | 5% (W18) | ||||
53 | W18 | 0% (W11) |
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Silvestre, J.D.; Castelo, A.M.P.; Silva, J.J.B.C.; de Brito, J.M.C.L.; Pinheiro, M.D. Energy Retrofitting of a Buildings’ Envelope: Assessment of the Environmental, Economic and Energy (3E) Performance of a Cork-Based Thermal Insulating Rendering Mortar. Energies 2020, 13, 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010143
Silvestre JD, Castelo AMP, Silva JJBC, de Brito JMCL, Pinheiro MD. Energy Retrofitting of a Buildings’ Envelope: Assessment of the Environmental, Economic and Energy (3E) Performance of a Cork-Based Thermal Insulating Rendering Mortar. Energies. 2020; 13(1):143. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010143
Chicago/Turabian StyleSilvestre, José D., André M. P. Castelo, José J. B. C. Silva, Jorge M. C. L. de Brito, and Manuel D. Pinheiro. 2020. "Energy Retrofitting of a Buildings’ Envelope: Assessment of the Environmental, Economic and Energy (3E) Performance of a Cork-Based Thermal Insulating Rendering Mortar" Energies 13, no. 1: 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010143
APA StyleSilvestre, J. D., Castelo, A. M. P., Silva, J. J. B. C., de Brito, J. M. C. L., & Pinheiro, M. D. (2020). Energy Retrofitting of a Buildings’ Envelope: Assessment of the Environmental, Economic and Energy (3E) Performance of a Cork-Based Thermal Insulating Rendering Mortar. Energies, 13(1), 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010143