Life-Cycle Assessment of Alternative Envelope Construction for a New House in South-Western Europe: Embodied and Operational Magnitude
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Construction: Base Case House and Envelope Alternatives
2.2. Building Operational Conditions
- OP25, which represents a low occupancy and modest and partial heating and cooling level, reinforced by Portuguese statistical data; it holds 25% of the energy requirements of simulated continuous operational pattern.
- OP50, which assumes the average occupancy of a working-out family and medium heating and cooling level, holding 50% of the simulated heating and cooling energy requirements for OP100.
3. Results
3.1. Influence of Ventilation Level vs. Insulation Level
3.1.1. Non-Renewable Primary Energy
3.1.2. Environmental Impact Assessment
3.2. Influence of Exterior Wall Construction Alternatives vs. Insulation Level
3.2.1. Primary Energy
3.2.2. Environmental Impact Assessment
3.3. Influence of Insulation Material
4. Discussion
- (a)
- Design-related: the fairly compact building, north–south oriented, with a low window-to-wall ratio. Some of these passive design measures were identified as being important to reduce operational energy in a Mediterranean climate [32]. Nevertheless, it would be interesting to assess the influence of different building designs for this climatic and operational context from a life-cycle perspective.
- (b)
- (c)
- (d)
- The Portuguese electricity mix, which has a substantial share of renewables [43]. In the last few years (and likely in the next few years), the electric mix should continue to have an increased contribution of renewable energy, which is expected to have lower environmental impact. Thus, it is even more likely that the operation phase has lower overall significance in new houses. Therefore, it is important to assess the embodied impacts in construction materials in order to arrive at construction alternatives with lower overall environmental impacts and consider those impacts at the project level jointly with operational environmental impacts at the local scale to avoid problem shifting.
- (a)
- Cork insulation had the lowest life-cycle impacts when compared with other insulation materials;
- (b)
- The base case XPS insulation had a high impact on OLD. This impact is justified by the extrusion process that used hydrofluorocarbons (HFC-134a). Recently, XPS producers started to use CO2 and acetone or HCF-152a as alternative blowing agents to replace HFC-134a. An LCA study of insulation materials [53] that assumed this replacement showed that new production methods can drastically reduce XPS OLD impact (from 1.64x10−4 to 7.27x10−8 kg CFC-11eq, per kg of XPS) and, in that case, the insulation tipping-point would be above the 12 cm thickness for both OP25 and OP50.
- (c)
- The acrylic plaster used in ETICS concrete walls was associated with a high impact for photochemical oxidation, so alternative production methods for this finishing layer should be studied
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Simplifications and Processes Out of the Scope | Reason |
---|---|
Energy used on construction site | It is considered of minor importance in other studies [1,45]. |
Furniture, plumbing, sanitary equipment, heat distribution pipes, change in land use | These are not affected by the alternative building envelope options and do not affect the comparative nature of the findings. Hence, embodied impacts are underestimated in the life-cycle model. |
Appliances and domestic hot water use, lighting | These needs are not dependent on envelope options. Improvements are independent of the building and mainly related to available technology (appliances efficiency) and user behavior. |
Insulation materials’ thermal properties were assumed to remain the same throughout the lifespan | Though the EU standards recommend considering the aging process of construction products to estimate the decay of thermal properties, overtime was out of the scope of our study. |
End-of-life phase | Expected to have a small life-cycle magnitude, representing less than 4% in Mediterranean dwellings (Nemry et al., 2010). Additionally, to predict waste treatment scenarios for such distant future (50 years) encompasses high uncertainty and waste treatment processes can change. |
Building Component | Area (m2) | Units | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Roof | 74.4 | Gravel (0.05 m); polypropylene felt; extruded polystyrene (XPS) insulation (0.06 m); bitumen layer (0.005 m); anhydrite screed (0.05 m); reinforced concrete slab (0.15 m); lime mortar (0.02 m); U = 0.39 W/m2K. | |
Slab | 76.4 | Wooden flooring (0.04 m square joists, air-layer, 0.02 m planks); anhydrite screed (0.03 m); reinforced concrete slab (0.15 m); lime mortar (0.02 m). | |
Ground floor | 80 | Wooden flooring (0.04 m square joists, air-layer XPS) 0.02 m planks); lightweight anhydrite screed (0.05 m); reinforced concrete (0.12 m); gravel (0.20 m) on ground; U = 0.56 W/m2K. | |
Structure | Beams, columns, foundations: reinforced concrete | ||
Exterior walls | 220 | Base plaster painted; hollow-brick masonry (0.11 m); air-cavity with XPS (0.06 m); hollow-brick masonry (0.15 m); base plaster; painting; U = 0.33 W/m2K. | |
Interior walls | 110 | Hollow-brick masonry (0.11 m); base plaster (0.02 + 0.02 m); painting. | |
Windows | 1 | 11 | Aluminum-frame with thermal break; double-glazing U = 1.1 W/(m2 K); exterior plastic shutters |
Doors (interior) | 1.6 | 8 | Wooden doors, varnished. |
Exterior door | 2 | 1 | Wooden doors, varnished (U = 1.8 W/(m2K). |
Passive Construction | Alternatives Studied | Base Case | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Envelope extruded polystyrene (XPS) insulation level (cm) 1,2 | 0; 3; 6; 9; 12 | 6 | ||
Total ventilation level, including infiltration (ac/h) 1 | 0.3; 0.6; 0.9; 1.2 | 0.6 | ||
Exterior wall construction type | Double hollow-brick masonry (XPS insulation) | Concrete block masonry2 (EPS insulation) | Wood walls (XPS insulation) | Double hollow-brick masonry (XPS insulation) |
Insulation material 1(equivalent U-value) | XPS; XPS CO2; EPS; Cork; Polyurethane rigid foam (PUR); Rock wool | XPS |
Building Simulation Settings | Description |
---|---|
3D build-up model | |
Living area (m2) | 133.2 |
Conditioned volume | 360 |
Heating set-point air temperature (with no set-back) | 20 °C |
Cooling set-point air temperature (with no set-back) | 25 °C |
Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC)schedule; gains schedule | 0:00–24:00 (24 h/7 a year) |
Location | Coimbra, Portugal |
Latitude/longitude (°) | 40.2°/−8.4° |
Elevation above sea (m) | 140 |
Hourly weather data | PRT_Coimbra_IWEC |
Internal gains (lumped into a single value) | 4 W per m2 of living area; as recommended by [48] |
Air-tightness (infiltration) | Dependent on total ventilation scenario |
Gains schedule | 0:00–24:00 (24 h/7 a year) |
Annual Period | Days | Shutters Open | Shutters Closed (Shading) |
---|---|---|---|
30 September to 30 June | weekdays | 7 h–19 h | 19 h–7 h |
weekends | 9 h–19 h | 19 h–9 h | |
30 June to 30 September | weekdays | 7 h–8.5 h | 8.5 h–7 h |
weekends | 9 h–12 h | 12 h–9 h |
Insulation (Thermal Conductivity 1 W/m2K) | NRPE | AD | GWP | AP | EP | PO | OLD | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
XPS CO2 | 0.035 | 1.4% | 1.4% | −7.4% | −0.5% | 0.2% | 3.2% | −96.9% |
EPS | 0.038 | 3.5% | 3.6% | −6.4% | 0.9% | −0.2% | 45.4% | −96.9% |
Cork | 0.038 | −6.8% | −6.3% | −10.4% | −1.1% | −0.5% | −3.3% | −96.9% |
PUR | 0.04 | 1.3% | 0.7% | −6.4% | 3.2% | 14.0% | 4.4% | −96.7% |
Rock Wool | 0.025 | −1.7% | −2.1% | −7.9% | 0.1% | 2.0% | −3.1% | −97.0% |
No insulation 2 | 0.035 | −10.4% | −10.3% | −12.7% | −7.3% | −5.6% | −8.0% | −97.0% |
Life-Cycle GWP (kg CO2eq/m2.year) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Location | OP (C/P) | Operation HVAC | Construction | Maintenance | Total |
Spain, Barcelona [14] | C | 1.7 heating 10.7 cooling | 4.5 | 2.9 | 49.4 |
Spain, Zaragoza [26] | C | 10.2 HVAC | 10,3 | - | 25 1 |
Spain, Lleida 2 [27] | C | 53.2 heating 21.1 cooling | 60.5 | - | 134.8 |
Italy, Piedmont [21] | C | 0.78 HVAC | 10.8 | - | 17.4 1 |
Portugal, Coimbra: base case house 1 | P | 2.5 heating 0.3 cooling | 7.5 | 0.4 | 10.4 |
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Monteiro, H.; Freire, F.; Fernández, J.E. Life-Cycle Assessment of Alternative Envelope Construction for a New House in South-Western Europe: Embodied and Operational Magnitude. Energies 2020, 13, 4145. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164145
Monteiro H, Freire F, Fernández JE. Life-Cycle Assessment of Alternative Envelope Construction for a New House in South-Western Europe: Embodied and Operational Magnitude. Energies. 2020; 13(16):4145. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164145
Chicago/Turabian StyleMonteiro, Helena, Fausto Freire, and John E. Fernández. 2020. "Life-Cycle Assessment of Alternative Envelope Construction for a New House in South-Western Europe: Embodied and Operational Magnitude" Energies 13, no. 16: 4145. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164145
APA StyleMonteiro, H., Freire, F., & Fernández, J. E. (2020). Life-Cycle Assessment of Alternative Envelope Construction for a New House in South-Western Europe: Embodied and Operational Magnitude. Energies, 13(16), 4145. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13164145