Case Study in Modular Lightweight Steel Frame Construction: Thermal Bridges and Energy Performance Assessment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. The Case Study
3.1. Design Requirements and Architecture
3.2. Structural Design and Building Envelope Characteristics
- i.
- Window shutters on both sliding doors acting as a lateral shading—during transport, they are closed, and their primary function changes to protecting the glazing from mechanical damage caused by external factors (rocks, birds, etc.).
- ii.
- Venetian blinds on larger sliding doors—motorized blinds can be manually controlled through a central unit, but they can be programmed to start shutting down automatically when solar radiation is too strong, or at sunset.
- iii.
- Self-load bearing textile overhang on larger sliding doors—this can be easily removed and installed when needed.
3.3. Technical Systems and Monitoring
4. Research Methodology
4.1. Materials and Boundary Conditions
4.2. Calculation of Effective Thermal Transmittance
4.3. Thermal Bridge Numerical Simulations
4.4. Energy Performance Calculations—Thermal Bridge Incorporation Approach
4.5. Parametric Study—Climate and Orientation Dependent Analysis
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Comparison between U and Ueff
Building Element | Steel Stud Spacing [cm] | Ueff [W/(m2 K)] | Reff [m2 K/W] | U [W/(m2 K)] | R [m2 K/W] | ΔU [%] | Ψ [W/(m K)] | fRsi [–] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wall | 60 | 0.14890 | 6.71592 | 0.116 | 8.62069 | 28.40 | 0.033 | 0.975 |
Wall | 30 | 0.16429 | 6.08680 | 0.116 | 8.62069 | 41.60 | 0.048 | 0.975 |
Roof | 48 | 0.14467 | 6.91228 | 0.110 | 9.09091 | 31.50 | 0.035 | 0.984 |
Floor | 38 | 0.16534 | 6.04814 | 0.125 | 8 | 32.30 | 0.040 | 0.959 |
5.2. MUZA’s Thermal Bridges
Construction Detail | L2D [W/(m K)] | Ψ [W/(m K)] | Min. Surf. Temp. [°C] | fRsi [–] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wall—wall corner | 0.38410 | 0.0178 | 18.293 | 0.943 |
Wall—niche | 0.32853 | 0.0800 | 18.539 | 0.951 |
Wall-floor connection | 0.28919 | −0.0038 | 17.707 | 0.924 |
Roof—wall connection | 0.28417 | −0.0195 | 18.394 | 0.946 |
Wall—sliding door frontal connection | 1.14286 | 0.0628 | 15.220 | 0.841 |
Wall—sliding doors niche | 1.22735 | 0.115 | 15.606 | 0.854 |
Sliding doors—wall side connection | 1.22786 | −0.209 | 13.028 | 0.768 |
Sliding doors—floor connection | 0.69195 | −0.295 | 14.378 | 0.813 |
Sliding doors—roof connection | 0.40650 | −0.472 | 15.330 | 0.844 |
5.3. The Effect of Numerical Calculation of Thermal Bridges on the Energy Performance
5.4. Climate and Orientation Effect on Energy Performance
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
A | External surface area of the building envelope | [m2] |
Af | Gross floor area | [m2] |
Ak | Net floor area | [m2] |
AW | Window surface area | [m2] |
COP | Coefficient of performance | [–] |
d | Thickness of component layer | [m] |
E″del | Annual specific delivered energy | [kWh/(m2a)] |
E″prim | Annual specific primary energy | [kWh/(m2a)] |
fp | Primary energy factor | [-] |
fRsi | Temperature factor | [-] |
f0 | Shape factor | [m−1] |
gꞱ | The total solar energy transmittance (calculated for solar radiation perpendicular to the glazing) | [-] |
h | Surface heat transfer coefficient | [W/(m2K)] |
HD | Transmission heat losses | [W/K] |
hse | External surface heat transfer coefficient | [W/(m2K)] |
hsi | Internal surface heat transfer coefficient | [W/(m2K)] |
l | Length of the geometrical model | [m] |
li | Length of the 2D geometrical model over which the Ui value is applied | [m] |
L2D | Two-dimensional thermal coupling coefficient | [W/(m·K)] |
n | Number of specific layers in building component | [-] |
n50 | Air changes per hour at a differential pressure of 50 Pa | [h-1] |
PW | Window perimeter | [m] |
Q″C,nd | Annual specific cooling energy need | [kWh/(m2a)] |
qE50 | Volume of air flowing through the m2 of envelope at 50 Pa pressure difference | [m3/(h·m2)] |
Q″H,nd | Annual specific heating energy need | [kWh/(m2a)] |
R | Thermal resistance | [(m2·K)/W] |
RH | Relative humidity | [%] |
T | Temperature | [°C] |
Ti | Internal environment (air) temperature | [°C, K] |
Te | External environment (air) temperature | [°C, K] |
Tsi,min | Minimum internal surface temperature | [°C, K] |
U or U-value | Thermal transmittance of building envelope element | [W/(m2·K)] |
Ueff or Ueff-value | Effective thermal transmittance of opaque building envelope element | [W/(m2·K)] |
Uf | Thermal transmittance of frame | [W/(m2·K)] |
Ug | Thermal transmittance of glass | [W/(m2·K)] |
Ui | One-directional thermal transmittance of the i-th building element separating the two environments | [W/(m2·K)] |
Uw | Thermal transmittance of windows | [W/(m2·K)] |
V | Heated air volume | [m3] |
Ve | Heated building gross volume | [m3] |
Greek symbols | ||
Δ | Difference between two quantities or increase of one quantity | [%] or [unit of observed quantity] |
λ | Thermal conductivity of building material | [W/(m·K)] |
μ | Water vapour diffusion resistance factor | [-] |
ϕ | Heat flow rate (heat flux density divided by unit length) | [W/m] |
χ | Point thermal bridge coefficient | [W/K] |
Ψ | Linear thermal transmittance | [W/(m·K)] |
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Net floor area, Ak [m2] | 14.75 |
Gross floor Area, Af [m2] | 22.35 |
External surface area of the building envelope, A [m2] | 118.96 |
Heated building gross volume, Ve [m3] | 69.73 |
Heated air volume, V [m3] | 35.84 |
Shape factor, f0 [m−1] | 1.71 |
Building Element | Layer (Internal to External) | Thickness [cm] | λ [W/m·K] | μ [-] |
---|---|---|---|---|
EXTERNAL WALL | Gypsum plasterboard | 1.25 | 0.25 | 8 |
Gypsum plasterboard | 1.25 | 0.25 | 8 | |
Glass wool | 5 | 0.037 | 1.10 | |
Vapour barrier | 0.015 | 0.50 | 230,000 | |
Oriented strand board (OSB) board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Glass wool | 15 | 0.035 | 1.10 | |
OSB board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Stone wool | 8 | 0.034 | 1.10 | |
Weather barrier (watertight, vapour open) | 0.20 | 0.50 | 5 | |
Intensively vented air layer | 4 | contribution neglected | contribution neglected | |
HPL cladding | 0.80 | contribution neglected | contribution neglected | |
ROOF | Gypsum plasterboard | 1.25 | 0.25 | 8 |
Stone wool | 5 | 0.035 | 1.10 | |
Stone wool | 8 | 0.035 | 1.10 | |
Vapour barrier | 0.015 | 0.50 | 230,000 | |
OSB board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Glass wool | 15 | 0.032 | 1.10 | |
DHF board | 1.50 | 0.10 | 11 | |
Weakly vented air layer | 2 | 0.30 | 1 | |
0.12 | 1 | |||
Sheet metal | 0.05 | 50 | 1,000,000 | |
FLOOR | Laminate | 1 | 0.13 | 50 |
OSB board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Stone wool | 2 | 0.036 | 1.10 | |
Vapour barrier | 0.015 | 0.50 | 230,000 | |
OSB board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Glass wool | 15 | 0.035 | 1.10 | |
OSB board | 2.20 | 0.13 | 50 | |
Bitumen waterproofing | 0.50 | 0.23 | 50,000 | |
Extruded Polystyrene (XPS) | 8 | 0.034 | 140 | |
Additional | Description | λ [W/m·K] | μ [-] | |
Steel | For LSF and perimeter columns and beams | 50 | 1,000,000 | |
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) | Window subframe | 0.57 | 50,000 | |
air_gap_1 | Chamber in the windowsill | 0.14 | 1 | |
air_gap_2 | Chamber in the windowsill | 0.28 | 1 | |
air_gap_3 | Chamber in the windowsill | 0.17 | 1 | |
air_gap_4 | Chamber in the windowsill | 0.43 | 1 | |
Window | Window | 0.165 | 50,000 | |
Window insulation | Thermal insulation around window subframe | 0.038 | 1.10 | |
Air in steel column | Air in reinforced vertical support and drainage pipe (corner of two walls) | 0.6812 | 1 | |
Air in steel beam | Beam support around the perimeter of the floor | 0.5456 | 1 |
Heat Flux Direction | Boundary | h [W/(m2K)] |
---|---|---|
Horizontal | Exterior | 25.00 |
Interior | 7.69 | |
Upwards | Exterior | 25.00 |
Interior | 10.00 | |
Downwards | Exterior | 25.00 |
Interior | 5.88 |
Air | T [°C] | RH [%] |
---|---|---|
Exterior | −10.00 | 90.00 |
Interior | −20.00 | 60.00 |
Units | Approach Using the Default U-Value Increase ΔU = 0.05 W/(m2K) | Approach Using the Ueff and Calculated ψ-Values | Relative Difference [%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total HD | [W/K] | 33.977 | 17.530 | 48.4 |
HD—opaque building elements | [W/K] | 21.429 | 16.189 | 24.5 |
HD—transparent building elements | [W/K] | 12.548 | 12.548 | 0.0 |
HD—thermal bridges | [W/K] | 0 | −11.207 | / |
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Milovanović, B.; Bagarić, M.; Gaši, M.; Vezilić Strmo, N. Case Study in Modular Lightweight Steel Frame Construction: Thermal Bridges and Energy Performance Assessment. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 10551. https://doi.org/10.3390/app122010551
Milovanović B, Bagarić M, Gaši M, Vezilić Strmo N. Case Study in Modular Lightweight Steel Frame Construction: Thermal Bridges and Energy Performance Assessment. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(20):10551. https://doi.org/10.3390/app122010551
Chicago/Turabian StyleMilovanović, Bojan, Marina Bagarić, Mergim Gaši, and Nikolina Vezilić Strmo. 2022. "Case Study in Modular Lightweight Steel Frame Construction: Thermal Bridges and Energy Performance Assessment" Applied Sciences 12, no. 20: 10551. https://doi.org/10.3390/app122010551
APA StyleMilovanović, B., Bagarić, M., Gaši, M., & Vezilić Strmo, N. (2022). Case Study in Modular Lightweight Steel Frame Construction: Thermal Bridges and Energy Performance Assessment. Applied Sciences, 12(20), 10551. https://doi.org/10.3390/app122010551