Climate-Based Analysis for the Potential Use of Coconut Oil as Phase Change Material in Buildings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Coconut Oil as PCM
2. Materials and Methods
- Selection of representative climates throughout the world.
- Characterization of the coconut oil sample through differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements and modelling in ESP-r as PCM.
- Definition of a simulation model (geometry, materials, and schedules) of the office space.
- Definition of the metrics to evaluate the performance of the material.
2.1. Climate Classification and Selection
2.2. Characterization of Coconut Oil through DSC
2.3. Coconut Oil as PCM in ESP-r
2.4. Simulation Model
2.4.1. Free-Float Space for ATFR and MTR
2.4.2. Control Model for Heating and Cooling Demand
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Climates Type A and B
3.2. Climates Type C
3.3. Climates Type D
3.4. Overall Energy Reduction
3.5. Overall ATFR and MTR
4. Conclusions
- Coconut oil can be used as a phase change material for the building sector, although its effectiveness correlates to the type of climate where it is applied.
- The climate analysis showed improved performances mainly in type (A) tropical and type (C) subtropical climates, for which this material provides benefits throughout the year by reducing energy peaks and energy demand. Other climates have presented improved results, but only for specific periods of the year.
- The room with PCM performs comparatively better when the outdoor average temperature is within the phase change range of the coconut oil. Within these limits, the higher the diurnal temperature range, the greater the results.
- The highest ATFR occurred in summer/fall for colder climates and winter for warmer climates, which suggests that for the latter, coconut oil may have lower performance when temperatures are too high. In those cases, if summer optimization is desired, a higher melting point is recommended. Nonetheless, even without undergoing the phase change, the material is still beneficial since the heat capacity of coconut oil is higher than that of gypsum plaster.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
Abbreviation | Meaning |
ATFR | Average temperature fluctuation reduction |
DSC | Differential scanning calorimetry |
DTR | Diurnal temperature range |
ESP-r | Environmental Systems Performance-Research (name of the building simulation software) |
HVAC | Heating ventilation air conditioning system |
MTR | Maximum temperature reduction |
PCM | Phase change material |
Pann, Pmax, Pmin | Annual precipitation, max and min monthly precipitation |
Pth | Dryness threshold |
SPMCPC55 | Method in ESP-r to consider PCM |
Tann, Tmax, Tmin | Annual mean temperature, max and min monthly temperature |
TES | Thermal energy storage |
Mathematical abbreviations | |
c(θ) | Heat capacity |
Latent heat capacity | |
Liquid heat capacity | |
Solid heat capacity | |
m | Mass |
Thermal energy | |
R | Heat rate |
TNoPCM | hourly temperature difference for the model without PCM |
TPCM | Hourly temperature difference for the model with PCM |
Cities | |
AUS | Cairns, Australia |
BRA | Campinas, Brazil |
GBR | London, Great Britain |
GTM | Guatemala City, Guatemala |
IDN | Bandung, Indonesia |
IRN | Tehran, Iran |
KOR | Seoul, South Korea |
PAK | Karachi, Pakistan |
TZA | Dar es Salaam, Tanzania |
USA_AK | Fairbanks, Alaska, United States |
USA_CA | San Francisco, California, United States |
ZMB | Mansa, Zambia |
Climate | |
First letter | Defines the groups of climates based on five different vegetation groups |
A | Equatorial climate |
B | Arid climates |
C | Warm temperate climates |
D | Snow climates |
E | Polar climates |
Second letter | Divides the climate groups based on precipitation |
s | Dry summer |
w | Dry winter |
f | Fully humid |
Third letter | |
a to d | Ranging from hot to cold summers (for C and D climates) |
(h) and (k) | Hot and cold climates (in B climates) |
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Representative Climates * (Köppen–Geiger Classification) | Chosen City | Country | Hemisphere | Climate | Average Temp. [°C] | Average Diurnal Temp. Range [K] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tropical Rainforest (Af) | Bandung | Indonesia | Southern | Af | 22.63 | 9.29 |
Tropical Monsoon (Am) | Cairns | Australia | Southern | Am | 24.34 | 7.20 |
Savanna (Aw) | Dar Es Salaam | Tanzania | Southern | Aw | 25.62 | 8.27 |
Hot Desert or Arid (BWh, BSh) | Karachi | Pakistan | Northern | BWh | 26.46 | 9.80 |
Cold Desert or Arid (BWk, BSk) | Tehran | Iran | Northern | BSk | 17.20 | 9.49 |
Mediterranean (Csa, Csb, Csc) | San Francisco | United States | Northern | Csb | 13.78 | 7.91 |
Subtropical (Cwa, Cwb, Cwc, Cfa) | Mansa | Zambia | Southern | Cwa | 18.54 | 13.48 |
Campinas | Brazil | Southern | Cfa | 22.03 | 11.70 | |
Guatemala City | Guatemala | Northern | Cwb | 18.70 | 9.15 | |
Oceanic (Cfb, Cfc) | London | United Kingdom | Northern | Cfb | 11.99 | 6.03 |
Hot or Warm Continental (Dsa, Dsb, Dwa, Dwb, Dfa, Dfb) | Seoul | South Korea | Northern | Dwa | 12.68 | 7.58 |
Cold Continental (Dsc, Dsd, Dwc, Dwd, Dfc, Dfd) | Fairbanks-Alaska | United States | Northern | Dfc | −1.52 | 10.01 |
T Solid [°C] | T Liquid [°C] | Thermal Conductivity [W/mK] [34] | Specific Heat in the Solid Phase [kJ/kg K] | Latent Heat [kJ/kg] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Solid Phase | Liquid Phase | Solid Phase | Liquid Phase | |||
16 | 25 | 0.32 | 0.80 | 4.28 | 2.45 | 64.59 |
Coefficient | Value |
---|---|
a | 1250.8 |
b | −174.9 |
c | −0.0863 |
d | 0.0020 |
e | 6.6158 |
Construction | Layers (Outside to Inside) | U [W/m2K] |
---|---|---|
Internal wall | White gypsum board (1.2 cm) Mineral wool (10 cm) White gypsum board (1.2 cm) | 0.36 |
Single Glazing | Single glazing (0.6 cm) | 5.69 |
Ceiling | Floor tiles (0.6 cm) Concrete slab (20 cm) Air Gap (50 cm) + Gypsum board (2 cm) (Base Case) or PCM (2 cm) (Coconut Oil) | 1.89 (Base Case) 2.00 (PCM/Coconut Oil Case) |
Floor | Concrete slab (20 cm) Floor tiles (0.6 cm) | 3.5 |
Reduction in kWh/Year (NoPCM-withPCM) | % Overall Reduction C+H | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | City | Climate | Cooling | Heating | C+H | |
1 | ZMB_Mansa | Cwa | −499 | −3 | −502 | 32% |
2 | IDN_Bandung | Af | −403 | 0 | −403 | 12% |
3 | AUS_Cairns | Am | −369 | 0 | −369 | 8% |
4 | BRA_Campinas | Cfa | −355 | −1 | −356 | 13% |
5 | GTM_Guatemala | Cwb | −337 | −3 | −340 | 41% |
6 | TZA_Dar es Salaam | Aw | −295 | 0 | −295 | 6% |
7 | PAK_Karachi | BWh | −169 | −2 | −171 | 3% |
8 | USA_CA_San Francisco | Csb | −156 | +51 | −106 | 11% |
9 | IRN_Tehran | BSk | −160 | +101 | −58 | 1% |
10 | KOR_Seoul | Dwa | −150 | +98 | −52 | 2% |
11 | USA_AK_Fairbanks | Dfc | −97 | +62 | −36 | 1% |
12 | GBR_London | Cfb | −136 | +129 | −7 | 0% |
# | City | Climate | ATFR | MTR | Highest ATFR and MTR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ZMB_Mansa | Cwa | 1.2 | 3.7 | Winter |
2 | PAK_Karachi | BWh | 1.1 | 3.7 | Winter |
3 | IDN_Bandung | Af | 1.0 | 2.3 | Winter |
4 | BRA_Campinas | Cfa | 1.0 | 2.5 | Winter |
5 | IRN_Tehran | BSk | 1.0 | 3.3 | Fall |
6 | GTM_Guatemala | Cwb | 1.0 | 3.1 | Winter |
7 | AUS_Cairns | Am | 1.0 | 2.3 | Winter |
8 | USA_CA_San Francisco | Csb | 0.8 | 3.3 | Fall |
9 | TZA_Dar es Salaam | Aw | 0.8 | 2.2 | Winter |
10 | GBR_London | Cfb | 0.7 | 3.1 | Summer |
11 | KOR_Seoul | Dwa | 0.6 | 3.0 | Fall |
12 | USA_AK_Fairbanks | Dfc | 0.6 | 3.1 | Summer |
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Eller, C.; Rida, M.; Boudier, K.; Otoni, C.; Celani, G.; Labaki, L.; Hoffmann, S. Climate-Based Analysis for the Potential Use of Coconut Oil as Phase Change Material in Buildings. Sustainability 2021, 13, 10731. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910731
Eller C, Rida M, Boudier K, Otoni C, Celani G, Labaki L, Hoffmann S. Climate-Based Analysis for the Potential Use of Coconut Oil as Phase Change Material in Buildings. Sustainability. 2021; 13(19):10731. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910731
Chicago/Turabian StyleEller, Cibele, Mohamad Rida, Katharina Boudier, Caio Otoni, Gabriela Celani, Lucila Labaki, and Sabine Hoffmann. 2021. "Climate-Based Analysis for the Potential Use of Coconut Oil as Phase Change Material in Buildings" Sustainability 13, no. 19: 10731. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910731
APA StyleEller, C., Rida, M., Boudier, K., Otoni, C., Celani, G., Labaki, L., & Hoffmann, S. (2021). Climate-Based Analysis for the Potential Use of Coconut Oil as Phase Change Material in Buildings. Sustainability, 13(19), 10731. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910731