Thermal and Daylighting Performance of Energy-Efficient Windows in Highly Glazed Residential Buildings: Case Study in Korea
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Window System
4. Baseline Model for Energy Simulation
4.1. Target Building
4.2. Simulation Modeling
Composition | U-factor |
---|---|
External wall | 0.47 W/m2K |
Internal wall | 0.6 W/m2K |
Component | Properties |
---|---|
U-factor | 2.7 W/m2K–Al frame |
Solar transmittance | 0.236 |
Shading device | Internal shading device |
4.3. Results
= monthly consumption-monthly base consumption
Month | Measurement (k Wh) | Simulation (k Wh) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Heating | Cooling | Heating | Cooling | |
January | 3176 | 3321 | ||
February | 2098 | 2414 | ||
March | 1831 | 1223 | ||
April | 872 | 425 | ||
May | 67 | 35 | 61 | |
June | 157 | 216 | ||
July | 290 | 309 | ||
August | 507 | 410 | ||
September | 109 | 283 | ||
October | 441 | 61 | 141 | |
November | 1738 | 1203 | ||
December | 2858 | 2948 | ||
Sum | 13,081 | 1159 | 11,534 | 1420 |
Difference | 11.8% | 22.6% |
5. Energy Simulations
5.1. Simulation Cases
Case | Window | Shading device (outward reflectivity/inward reflectivity) | Ventilation mode |
---|---|---|---|
Case 1 | SW | Internal shading device (84%/84%) | Minimum ventilation mode (0.7 ACH) |
Case 2 | DW | Internal shading device (84%/84%) | |
Case 3 | DWS-1 | Shading in cavity (84%/84%) | |
Case 4 | DWS-2 | Shading in cavity (84%/10%) | |
Case 5 | SW | Internal shading device (84%/84%) | Natural ventilation + Minimum ventilation mode (0.7 ACH) |
Case 6 | DW | Internal shading device (84%/84%) | |
Case 7 | DWS-1 | Shading in cavity (84%/84%) | |
Case 8 | DWS-2 | Shading in cavity (84%/10%) |
Type | Properties of window system | Shading device |
---|---|---|
SW | - Glazing type: tinted glass panes | |
- U-factor: external window (2.7 W/m2K–Al frame) | ||
- Solar transmission: 0.236 | ||
- Operable area: 0.62 m2 (Cd: 0.13) | ||
DW | - Glazing type: clear glass panes + low-E glass panes | |
- U-factor: internal window (1.2 W/m2K–PVC frame) | ||
external window (2.7 W/m2K–Al frame) | ||
- Solar transmission: 0.266 | ||
- Operable area: 0.62 m2 (Cd: 0.13) | ||
DWS | - Glazing type: clear glass panes + low-E glass panes | |
- U-factor: internal window (2.4 W/m2K–Al frame) | ||
external window (2.7 W/m2K–Al frame) | ||
- Solar transmission: 0.266 | ||
- Operable area 1 (External window—cavity space): | ||
Horizontal opening: 0.17 m2 (Cd: 0.64) | ||
Vertical opening: 0.36 m2 (Cd: 0.24) | ||
- Operable area 2 (Internal window): | ||
Fully opened condition: 1.28 m2 (Cd: 0.64) | ||
Partially opened condition: 0.60 m2 (Cd: 0.64) |
5.2. Natural Ventilation Strategy
5.3. Results and Discussion
5.3.1. Cooling Loads
Category | Minimum ventilation mode (kWh) | Natural ventilation + Minimum ventilation mode (kWh) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | |
May | 180 | 144 | 24 | 17 | 50 | 28 | 0 | 0 |
June | 686 | 676 | 438 | 396 | 377 | 292 | 121 | 103 |
July | 989 | 956 | 802 | 763 | 624 | 546 | 397 | 366 |
August | 1313 | 1223 | 1006 | 970 | 1001 | 886 | 613 | 577 |
September | 905 | 835 | 387 | 359 | 511 | 378 | 75 | 65 |
October | 453 | 382 | 83 | 77 | 315 | 251 | 22 | 19 |
Total | 4527 | 4215 | 2739 | 2582 | 2879 | 2380 | 1228 | 1130 |
Categories | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cooling load (kWh) | Minimum ventilation mode | 4523 | 4215 | 2739 | 2582 |
Reductions (%) | - | 7% | 39% | 43% | |
Minimum ventilation + Natural ventilation mode | 2879 | 2380 | 1228 | 1130 | |
Reductions (%) | - | 17% | 57% | 61% | |
Reductions by ventilation modes (%) | 36% | 44% | 55% | 56% |
Window types | Minimum ventilation mode | Natural ventilation +Minimum ventilation mode |
---|---|---|
SW | 2911 | 1677 |
DW | 3295 | 1882 |
DWS-1 | 3030 | 1367 |
DWS-2 | 2959 | 1299 |
Window types | Outdoor temperature | |
---|---|---|
15–20 °C | 20–25 °C | |
SW | 4.1 | 12.7 |
DW | 4.2 | 12.7 |
DWS-1 | 4.4 | 13.5 |
DWS-2 | 4.4 | 13.5 |
Category | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minimum ventilation mode | Radiant heat gain | 3000 | 2085 | 243 | 284 |
Convective heat gain | 3337 | 2515 | 936 | 1035 | |
Solar transmitted | 1282 | 1731 | 867 | 490 | |
Natural ventilation + Minimum ventilation mode | Radiant heat gain | 3057 | 1504 | 160 | 168 |
Convective heat gain | 2984 | 2693 | 527 | 538 | |
Solar transmitted | 1050 | 137 | 499 | 278 |
5.3.2. Electricity Cost
Category | Minimum ventilation (kWh) | Natural ventilation + Minimum ventilation mode (kWh) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | |
May | 643 | 631 | 591 | 589 | 600 | 592 | 583 | 583 |
June | 812 | 808 | 729 | 715 | 709 | 680 | 623 | 617 |
July | 913 | 902 | 850 | 837 | 791 | 765 | 715 | 705 |
August | 1021 | 991 | 918 | 906 | 917 | 878 | 787 | 775 |
September | 885 | 861 | 712 | 703 | 753 | 709 | 608 | 605 |
October | 734 | 710 | 611 | 609 | 688 | 667 | 590 | 589 |
Total | 5007 | 4903 | 4411 | 4359 | 4458 | 4291 | 3907 | 3875 |
Category | Minimum ventilation (Won) | Natural ventilation + Minimum ventilation mode (Won) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 | |
May | 252,040 | 242,360 | 210,090 | 208,480 | 217,350 | 210,900 | 203,630 | 203,630 |
June | 388,370 | 385,150 | 321,410 | 310,120 | 305,280 | 281,890 | 235,900 | 231,060 |
July | 469,840 | 460,980 | 419,030 | 408,540 | 371,430 | 350,460 | 310,120 | 302,050 |
August | 556,970 | 553,770 | 473,890 | 464,200 | 473,070 | 441,620 | 368,210 | 358,520 |
September | 447,260 | 427,900 | 307,700 | 300,440 | 340,770 | 305,280 | 223,810 | 221,380 |
October | 325,450 | 306,090 | 226,230 | 224,610 | 288,340 | 271,400 | 209,290 | 208,480 |
Total (Won) | 2,439,930 | 2,376,250 | 1,958,350 | 1,916,390 | 1,996,240 | 1,861,550 | 1,550,960 | 1,525,120 |
(US Dollar) | 2360 | 2298 | 1894 | 1853 | 1931 | 1800 | 1500 | 1475 |
Reduction (%) | - | 3% | 20% | 21% | - | 7% | 22% | 24% |
6. Daylight Simulations
6.1. Daylighting Simulation Overview
Building components | Reflectance | |
---|---|---|
Wall | 0.604 | |
Floor | 0.299 | |
Ceiling | 0.702 | |
Window frame | 0.796 | |
Glazing property | External window | 0.639 |
(Visual transmittance) | Internal window | 0.611 |
Room size | Depth | 14.2 m |
Height | 2.4 m | |
Cavity depth | DW | 5 cm |
DWS | 20 cm | |
Simulation time | (for illuminance) | 21 June (12:00 pm) |
6.2 Results and Discussion
6.2.1. Daylighting Factor
Shading condition | Without shading | With shading | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Window type | SW | DW | DWS | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 |
Reflectivity (Outward/Inward) | - | - | - | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/10 |
Average | 2.8 | 1.7 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 0.4 |
Ration of DF > 2 | 29.1% | 20.3% | 19.7% | 7.6% | 0.8% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
Shading condition | Without shading | With shading | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Window type | SW | DW | DWS | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 |
Reflectivity (Outward/Inward) | - | - | - | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/10 |
Perimeter zone | 2293.52 | 1045.31 | 999.99 | 557.51 | 285.53 | 280.57 | 159.49 |
Middle zone | 374.31 | 209.85 | 209.63 | 82.67 | 42.02 | 42.80 | 21.88 |
Internal zone | 105.08 | 59.03 | 59.03 | 15.83 | 7.88 | 8.70 | 2.82 |
6.2.2. Useful Daylight Index (UDI)
Shading condition | Without shading | With shading | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Window type | SW | DW | DWS | SW | DW | DWS-1 | DWS-2 |
Reflectivity (Outward/Inward) | - | - | - | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/84 | 84/10 |
UDI<100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
UDI100-2000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
UDI>2000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
6.2.3. Absolute Glare
Range | >2000 cd/m2 | >1000 cd/m2 | <500 cd/m2 | <30 cd/m2 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Perception of occupants | Too bright, anywhere in the room | Too bright, in the visual field | Preferable | Unacceptably dark |
7. Conclusions
- (1)
- According to our results, a cooling load reduction can be achieved by adopting the DWS. This reduction ranges from 43% to 61%. Regardless of the implementation of natural ventilation, the DWS offers a better performance than conventional windows. With natural ventilation, the performance of the DWS can be maximized.
- (2)
- The convective and radiant heat reductions were the most critical factors affecting the reduction of the cooling load via the application of the DWS.
- (3)
- An increase in the solar absorption by the rear surface of the shading device can reduce the cooling load by approximately 4%. This option could be considered when the cooling load has to be reduced to the lowest possible level.
- (4)
- Electricity cost during the cooling period can be significantly reduced by about 20%–24% by replacing conventional SWs with a DWS.
- (5)
- A shading device setting that prioritizes effective cooling load reduction can greatly decrease the DF and the glare risk of the indoor space. Especially, implementation of a shading device with low reflectivity at rear surface can result in undesirable low luminance level and illuminance level at indoor space.
- (6)
- A DWS implementing shading device with highly reflective at all surfaces is appropriate option for the better thermal and visual environment, while shading device with low reflectivity at the rear surface can contribute an additional 4% cooling load reduction.
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Share and Cite
Cheong, C.H.; Kim, T.; Leigh, S.-B. Thermal and Daylighting Performance of Energy-Efficient Windows in Highly Glazed Residential Buildings: Case Study in Korea. Sustainability 2014, 6, 7311-7333. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6107311
Cheong CH, Kim T, Leigh S-B. Thermal and Daylighting Performance of Energy-Efficient Windows in Highly Glazed Residential Buildings: Case Study in Korea. Sustainability. 2014; 6(10):7311-7333. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6107311
Chicago/Turabian StyleCheong, Chang Heon, Taeyeon Kim, and Seung-Bok Leigh. 2014. "Thermal and Daylighting Performance of Energy-Efficient Windows in Highly Glazed Residential Buildings: Case Study in Korea" Sustainability 6, no. 10: 7311-7333. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6107311
APA StyleCheong, C. H., Kim, T., & Leigh, S. -B. (2014). Thermal and Daylighting Performance of Energy-Efficient Windows in Highly Glazed Residential Buildings: Case Study in Korea. Sustainability, 6(10), 7311-7333. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6107311