Investigation of the Thermal Performance of Lightweight Assembled Exterior Wall Panel (LAEWP) with Stud Connections
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. LAEWP Configuration
3. Thermal Performance Testing
4. Thermal Performance Simulation
4.1. Method Verification
4.2. FEM Model of the LAEWP
4.3. Material Property
4.4. Boundary Conditions
4.5. Results and Analysis
5. Improvement of the LAEWP
5.1. Univariate Improvement Approaches
5.2. Multivariate Improvement Approaches
6. Conclusions
- The thermal insulation of the LAEWP with EPS foam (0.9 W·m−2·K−1) was found to have better performance than that of the LAEWP with polystyrene particle mortar (1.15 W·m−2·K−1);
- The heat transfer coefficient of LAEWP found numerically was 0.911 W·m−2·K−1, which is in good agreement with the experimental result and the accuracy is 98.8%. Therefore, the FEM result is close enough to serve as the benchmark to evaluate the effectiveness of various improvement approaches. Reasonable overestimation of the heat transfer coefficient was also validated in the later improvement stage;
- All six improvement approaches analyzed led to a reduction in the heat transfer coefficient of the LAEWP, ranging from 0.9% to 13.2%. The relative effectiveness methods are enhancement of insulation material and air layer, as well as the implementation of a web opening;
- The multivariate improvement approach labeled SSR + SNR + FWO + IME was found to have the best insulation performance. The best reduction percentage of the U-value is 23.7%, and the heat transfer coefficient of LAEWP was recorded as 0.695 W·m−2·K−1.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Items | Insulation Material | Heat Transfer Coefficient (W·m−2·K−1) |
---|---|---|
1 | Polystyrene particle mortar | 1.15 |
2 | EPS foam | 0.90 |
Items | Thermal Conductivity (W·m−1·K−1) |
---|---|
Concrete | 1.5100 |
Masonry mortar | 0.9300 |
Air interlayer—40 mm | 0.0845 |
Items | Value |
---|---|
Indoor ambient temperature (°C) | 18.0 |
Outdoor ambient temperature (°C) | 0.0 |
Indoor surface film condition (W·m−2·K−1) | 8.7 |
Outdoor surface film condition (W·m−2·K−1) | 23.3 |
Items | Average Heat Flux (W·m−2) | Average Temp. Difference (K) | Heat Transfer Coefficient (W·m−2·K−1) |
---|---|---|---|
3D model | 31.67 | 14.097 | 2.247 |
Reference [22] | 31.90 | 13.979 | 2.282 |
Items | Thermal Conductivity (W·m−1·K−1) | Density (kg·m−3) | Specific Heat (kJ·kg−1·K−1) |
---|---|---|---|
Concrete [24] | 1.620 | 2500.00 | 0.92 |
Air layer [25] | 0.067 | 1.29 | 1.00 |
EPS [26] | 0.036 | 20.00 | 2.41 |
Steel stud [26] | 50.000 | 7850.00 | 0.48 |
Light-gauge steel [26] | 50.000 | 7850.00 | 0.48 |
Fiber concrete [27] | 0.850 | 1500.00 | 1.05 |
Items | Maximum | Minimum |
---|---|---|
Temperature (°C) | 18.60 | −19.57 |
Heat flux (W·m−2) | 1.730 × 104 | 1.608 |
Label | Approaches | Details |
---|---|---|
1 (SSR) | Stud size reduction | The diameter and length of studs reduced from 10 mm and 40 mm to 8 mm and 30 mm, respectively |
2 (SNR) | Stud number reduction | The number of studs on each edge frame reduced from 5 to 4 |
3 (TCL) | Thicker concrete layer | The thickness of concrete/fiber concrete changed from 50 mm/20 mm to 60 mm/30 mm |
4 (AAL) | Avoid air layer | The material property of the air layer (0.067 W·m−1·K−1) changed to EPS (0.036 W·m−1·K−1) |
5 (FWO) | Frame web opening | See Figure 9 and corresponding explanation |
6 (IME) | Insulation material enhancement | The thermal conductivity changed to 0.02 W·m−1·K−1, which is an average number for aerogel insulation material |
Label | Temperature T (°C) | Heat Flux (W·m−2) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maximum | Minimum | Maximum | Minimum | |
1 (SSR) | 18.60 | −19.57 | 1.934 × 104 | 1.556 |
2 (SNR) | 18.60 | −19.57 | 1.601 × 104 | 1.334 |
3 (TCL) | 18.60 | −19.57 | 1.696 × 104 | 1.572 |
4 (AAL) | 18.64 | −19.58 | 2.079 × 104 | 1.349 |
5 (FWO) | 18.60 | −19.57 | 1.532 × 104 | 0.567 |
6 (IME) | 19.18 | −19.99 | 1.743 × 104 | 0.892 |
Benchmark | 18.60 | −19.57 | 1.730 × 104 | 1.608 |
Label | of LAEWP (W·m−2) | (K) |
Heat Transfer Coefficient (W·m−2·K−1) | Reduction (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Benchmark | 30.847 | 33.878 | 0.911 | - |
1 (SSR) | 30.160 | 33.921 | 0.889 | 2.4% |
2 (SNR) | 30.279 | 33.998 | 0.891 | 2.2% |
3 (TCL) | 30.446 | 33.703 | 0.903 | 0.9% |
4 (AAL) | 28.488 | 34.351 | 0.829 | 9.0% |
5 (FWO) | 28.890 | 34.270 | 0.843 | 7.5% |
6 (IME) | 27.318 | 34.528 | 0.791 | 13.2% |
Label | of LAEWP (W·m−2) | (K) |
Heat Transfer Coefficient (W·m−2·K−1) |
---|---|---|---|
SSR + SNR + FWO | 27.945 | 34.376 | 0.813 |
SSR + SNR + FWO + AAL | 25.431 | 34.892 | 0.729 |
SSR + SNR + FWO + IME | 24.369 | 35.046 | 0.695 |
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Li, T.; Xia, J.; Chin, C.S.; Song, P. Investigation of the Thermal Performance of Lightweight Assembled Exterior Wall Panel (LAEWP) with Stud Connections. Buildings 2022, 12, 473. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12040473
Li T, Xia J, Chin CS, Song P. Investigation of the Thermal Performance of Lightweight Assembled Exterior Wall Panel (LAEWP) with Stud Connections. Buildings. 2022; 12(4):473. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12040473
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Tianzhen, Jun Xia, Chee Seong Chin, and Pei Song. 2022. "Investigation of the Thermal Performance of Lightweight Assembled Exterior Wall Panel (LAEWP) with Stud Connections" Buildings 12, no. 4: 473. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12040473
APA StyleLi, T., Xia, J., Chin, C. S., & Song, P. (2022). Investigation of the Thermal Performance of Lightweight Assembled Exterior Wall Panel (LAEWP) with Stud Connections. Buildings, 12(4), 473. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12040473