Characterising Embodied Energy in Construction Activities Using Energy Inventory Life Cycle Assessment Method
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
Reliability of LCA
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. DCIEE Evaluation
- EDCIEE: Represents the direct component of the initial embodied energy (GJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the transport of construction materials and components from the origin to the construction site (GJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the transport of labourers from/to the construction site (GJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the vertical and horizontal transport of materials, components, and people at the construction site;
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the construction activities in general, as a result of the use of equipment (GJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the lighting at the construction site (GJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the transportation of components and materials from the site to the next destination (GJ).
3.2. Sub-Processes of the Transportation
3.2.1. Transportation of Construction Materials from the Manufacturer to the Construction Site ()
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the transport of construction materials and components from the origin to the construction site (MJ);
- ET1, ET2, ETn: Represent the energy consumption associated with each of the different types of materials and components (MJ).
- : Represents the distance between the construction site and the factory (km);
- : Represents the mass of the component under analysis (t);
- : Represents the parameter of energy consumption for inter-municipal or inter-state displacement (0.878 MJ/t. km);
- : Represents the inactivity coefficient.
- : Represents the distance between the construction site and the factory (km);
- : Represents the mass of the component under analysis (t);
- : Represents the parameter of energy consumption for metropolitan displacement (1071 MJ/t. km);
- : Represents the inactivity coefficient.
3.2.2. Transportation of Labourers ()
- : Represents the average unit consumption with the automotive transport (MJ/km);
- : Represents the average unit consumption with the transportation by car (1361 MJ/km);
- Represents the average unit consumption with the transportation by motorcycle (1289 MJ/km);
- Represents the average unit consumption with the transportation by public transport (0.307 MJ/km).
- : Represents the total number of trips made by the workers;
- : Represents the total number of hours used to carry out the activities of the construction site (h);
- : Represents the value of the weekly work accomplished in 5 working days according to the Weekly Work Hours (h);
- : Represents the number of weekly trips.
- : Represents the energy consumption with the transport of labourers from/to the construction site (MJ);
- : Represents the total number of trips made by the workforce of the enterprise;
- : Represents the average distance traveled in the trips (km);
- : Represents the average unit consumption with the automotive transport (MJ/km).
3.2.3. Transportation of Waste ()
- : Represents the energy consumption with the transportation of components and materials from the site to the next destination (MJ);
- : Represents the distance between the construction site and the disposal site (km);
- : Represents the mass to be discarded (t);
- : Represents the parameter of energy consumption for metropolitan displacement (1071 MJ/t. km);
- : Represents the inactivity coefficient of loss.
3.3. Construction Activities on the Construction Site ()
- : Represents the total energy consumption associated with construction activities (MJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the vertical and horizontal transport of materials, losses, components, and people at the construction site (MJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with the production activities in general, with the use of the equipment (MJ);
- : Represents the energy consumption associated with lighting at the construction site (MJ).
3.3.1. Transportation on the Construction Site ()
- Represents energy consumption due to intra-site transport (MJ);
- Represents the estimated energy consumption due to intra-site transportation through the use of equipment supplied by the electricity grid connected to the concessionaire (MJ);
- Represents the estimated energy consumption due to intra-site transport through the use of diesel-based equipment (MJ).
3.3.2. Construction Activities ()
- : Represents the overall energy consumption associated with the construction activities, with the use of the equipment (MJ);
- : Represents the estimated electric energy consumption with construction equipment (MJ);
- : Represents the estimated energy consumption of petroleum products due to construction equipment (MJ).
3.3.3. Lighting at the Construction Site ()
3.4. Data Quality and Validity
- C1: Analyse the data used to characterise the sub-processes and activities.
- C2: Apply the quality indicators at least in the processes considered most significant, based on the results identified.
4. Case Study
4.1. Transportation of Construction Materials and Components
4.1.1. Transportation of Labourers
4.1.2. Transportation of Waste due to Damages and Losses
4.2. Energy Consumption Associated with Construction Activities Occurring on the Construction Site
4.2.1. Electric Power Consumption in the Construction Activities
4.2.2. Fossil Fuel Consumption in the Construction Activities
4.3. Data Quality and Interpretations
5. Analysis of the Obtained Results
Challenges Facing the Application of the LCA Method
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Source | Life Cycle Phases | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Manufacturing Phase | Construction Phase | Operation Phase | Maintenance Phase | End-of-Life Phase | |
[28] | Production Energy | Operation Energy | Recurrent Embodied Energy | Demolition Energy | |
[23] | Initial Embodied Energy | - | - | - | |
indirect component | direct component | ||||
[29] | Embodied Energy | Operating Energy | Embodied Energy | ||
indirect component | direct component | Recurrent Energy | Demolition Energy | ||
[30] | Initial Embodied Energy | Operating Energy | Recurrent Embodied Energy | Demolition Energy | |
indirect component | direct component | ||||
[31] | Embodied Energy | Operating Energy | Embodied Energy |
Sub-Process | Symbol | Activity | Source of Energy |
---|---|---|---|
Transportation of construction materials from the manufacturer to the construction site | ET | Transport of materials and components from the origin to the construction site | Oil derivative |
Transportation of Labour | ETL | Transport of labourers from/to the construction site | Oil derivative |
Construction Activities on the Construction Site | ETCS | Vertical and horizontal transport of materials, losses, components, and people at the construction site | Electricity and Oil derivative |
EP | Production activities, in general, with the use of the equipment | Electricity and Oil derivative | |
EL | Lighting at the construction site | Electricity | |
Transport of Waste due to Damages and Losses (during the construction phase of buildings) | EDL | Transportation of components and materials from the site to the next destination | Oil derivative |
Floor Level | Use | Building Area (m2) | Height Level |
---|---|---|---|
4th Underground | pavement | 401.96 | −13.23 |
3rd Underground | garage | 2451.90 | −9.72 |
2nd Underground | garage | 2451.90 | −6.66 |
1st Underground | store deposit and garage | 2388.95 | −3.06 |
Ground Floor | stores | 1236.19 | 0.00 |
1st Floor | commercial rooms | 1267.76 | 3.85 |
2nd Floor | commercial rooms | 1114.22 | 6.91 |
3rd Floor | commercial rooms | 1114.22 | 9.97 |
4th Floor | commercial rooms | 1114.22 | 13.39 |
Roof | auditorium | 1200.94 | 16.99 |
Machines and AC | pavement | 848.00 | 20.89 |
Reservoir | water storage | 75.00 | 24.98 |
Total Floor Area | 15,665.26 |
Activity | Consumption with Metropolitan Travel (GJ) | Consumption with Inter-Municipal or Interstate Travel (GJ) | Total Consumption (GJ) |
---|---|---|---|
Envelope | 24.398 | 265.112 | 274.087 |
Iron frames | 0.752 | - | 0.752 |
Wood frames | 0.235 | 20.161 | 20.396 |
Aluminium frames | 2.177 | - | 2.177 |
Glasses | - | 49.141 | 49.141 |
Wall coverings | 10.816 | 323.448 | 334.263 |
Floor covering | 11.466 | 66.592 | 78.058 |
Sills and slabs | 0.062 | 21.128 | 21.190 |
Painting | - | 11.125 | 11.125 |
Benches | 0.050 | 10.038 | 10.088 |
Linings | - | 17.807 | 17.807 |
Superstructure and foundation | 331.693 | 433.433 | 765.126 |
Scaffolding and others | 6.038 | - | 6.038 |
Construction site location | 0.033 | 0.002 | 0.035 |
Hydraulic installations | 0.20 | 14.897 | 15.097 |
Electrical installations | - | 15.210 | 15.210 |
Total Consumption | 387.92 | 1248.094 | 1620.59 |
Total consumption (GJ/m2) | - | - | 0.103 |
Building Component/Activity | Man-Hours | % | Building Component/Activity | Man-Hours | % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Benches | 968.99 | 0.29 | Sills and slabs | 1167.52 | 0.35 |
Wood frames | 1998.20 | 0.60 | Iron frames | 2886.78 | 0.87 |
Aluminum frames | 5125.21 | 1.55 | Scaffolding and others | 5167.68 | 1.56 |
Envelope | 13,196.30 | 3.99 | Machinery operation | 13,612.05 | 4.11 |
Construction site | 14,286.23 | 4.32 | Electrical installations | 16,801.52 | 5.08 |
Painting | 18,065.80 | 5.46 | Hydraulic installations | 16,929.70 | 5.12 |
Floor covering | 26,730.40 | 8.08 | Construction management | 63,360 | 19.15 |
Wall coverings | 29,706.00 | 8.98 | Superstructure and foundation | 100,164.50 | 30.27 |
Total | 330,936.59 | 100% |
Building Component/Activity | Loss | % | Building Component/Activity | Loss | % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Benches | 0.693 | 0.04 | Sills and slabs | 0.814 | 0.05 |
Wood frames | 1.776 | 0.12 | Iron frames | 1.573 | 0.10 |
Aluminum frames | 5.929 | 0.39 | Scaffolding and others | 8.33 | 0.55 |
Envelope | 60.102 | 3.98 | Linings | 1.311 | 0.08 |
Construction site | 0.612 | 0.04 | Electrical installations | 6.015 | 0.40 |
Painting | 1.270 | 0.08 | Hydraulic installations | 2.161 | 0.14 |
Floor covering | 56.487 | 3.74 | glasses | 1.967 | 0.13 |
Wall coverings | 59.829 | 3.97 | Superstructure and foundation | 1299.62 | 86.15 |
Total | 1508.49 | 100% |
Equipment Used in the Construction Activities of the Case Study | |
---|---|
Energy Used | Equipment |
Electric Power | Air compressor, temporary and permanent pumps, soil compactors, concrete surface finishers, vibrating rulers, dipping vibrators, perforator, concrete mixer, mortar mixer, concrete pump, iron cutting machine, breaking hammer, drilling machine, hand circular saw, soldering machine, elevator. |
Fossil Fuels | Small loader, forklift, manipulator, mini excavator, crane. |
Equipment | Power (Hp/Watts) | Consumption Parameter (Diesel) L/h | Permanence in the Work (Months) | Usage Parameter | Hours (h) | Factor | Diesel Consumption (L) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Small Loader | 49/36.554 | 5.12 | 36 | 200 AWH | 6000 | 0.2 | 6.44 |
Manipulator | 175/130.550 | 26.25 | 24 | 2000 AWH | 4000 | 0.2 | 21,000 |
Mini Excavator | 92/68.632 | 14.4 | 6 | 2000 AWH | 1000 | 0.2 | 2880 |
Crane | - | 38 | 1 | 2000 AWH | 167 | 0.2 | 1269.20 |
Moto-creator | 365/272.290 | 35.40 | - | 0.065 h/m3 | 1568.84 | - | 55,536.93 |
Crawler Tractor | 185/138.010 | 19.50 | - | 0.0016 h/m3 | 38.62 | - | 753.09 |
Compactor | 6/4.476 | 1.5 | - | 0.305 h/m3 | 752.59 | - | 1128.885 |
Concrete pump 57 m3/h | 100/74.600 | 20.2 | - | 4.818, 67 m3 | 85 | - | 1717 |
Total Consumption | 90,429.11 |
Sub-Process | Activity | Input | Result | Triangulation Parameter | Reliability Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Transportation of the sub-processes | Transport of construction materials | 1 | 0.103 GJ/m2 | 0.260 GJ/m2 [59] 0.096 GJ/m2 [73] 0.260 GJ/m2 * [33] 0.378 GJ/m2 ** [74] 0.125 GJ/m2 *** [75] | Up to 70% = 3 |
2 | |||||
3 | |||||
Transport of labourers | 4 | 0.122 GJ/m2 | 0.845 GJ/m2 **** [59] | More than 70% = 5 | |
5 | |||||
6 | |||||
7 | |||||
Transport of damages and losses | 8 | 0.004 GJ/m2 | 0.113 GJ/m2 [59] | More than 70% = 5 | |
9 | |||||
10 | |||||
Activities on the construction site | Transport on the construction site | 11 | 0.252 GJ/m2 | 0.004 GJ/m2 [59] 0.252 GJ/m2 ** [74] 0.267 GJ/m2 ** [75] | Up to 30% = 1 |
12 | |||||
Production activities | 13 | ||||
14 | |||||
Lighting at the construction site | 15 | ||||
16 |
Input | Indicator | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reliability | Completeness | Temporal Correlation | Geographic Correlation | Technological Correspondence | |
1 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
2 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
3 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
4 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
5 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
6 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
7 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
8 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
9 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
10 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
11 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
12 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
13 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
14 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
15 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
16 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Source | Energy Consumed for Transportation of Construction Materials | Location of the Case Study |
---|---|---|
Present Case Study | 0.481 GJ/m2 | Brazil |
Kuhn [73] | 0.096 GJ/m2 | Brazil |
Tavares [59] | 0.260 GJ/m2 | Brazil |
Adalberth [75] | 0.126 GJ/m2 | Sweden |
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Haddad, A.N.; Sedrez, M.M.; Najjar, M.K.; Hammad, A.W.A.; Soares, C.A.P. Characterising Embodied Energy in Construction Activities Using Energy Inventory Life Cycle Assessment Method. Buildings 2023, 13, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13010052
Haddad AN, Sedrez MM, Najjar MK, Hammad AWA, Soares CAP. Characterising Embodied Energy in Construction Activities Using Energy Inventory Life Cycle Assessment Method. Buildings. 2023; 13(1):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13010052
Chicago/Turabian StyleHaddad, Assed N., Michele M. Sedrez, Mohammad K. Najjar, Ahmed W. A. Hammad, and Carlos A. P. Soares. 2023. "Characterising Embodied Energy in Construction Activities Using Energy Inventory Life Cycle Assessment Method" Buildings 13, no. 1: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13010052
APA StyleHaddad, A. N., Sedrez, M. M., Najjar, M. K., Hammad, A. W. A., & Soares, C. A. P. (2023). Characterising Embodied Energy in Construction Activities Using Energy Inventory Life Cycle Assessment Method. Buildings, 13(1), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13010052