1. Introduction
The Moroccan energy situation assessment has revealed that the country imports about 95% of its energy needs, 60% of which is oil, equivalent to 9 million TOE (tons of oil equivalents) [
1]. This national energy bill weighs heavily where 20% of total imports and 50% of the trade deficit represent only oil. Despite this situation, Morocco supports gas users, industry, and households where domestic gas price support subsidies are close to 10% of investment expenditure in the general state budget [
2].
In the same directive of this evaluation, and focusing on the residential sector that represents the purpose of this work, it is essential to discuss the country’s electric consumption. Electrical energy consumption increased from 487.38 kWh/person in 2000 to 911.64 kWh/person in 2014. Meanwhile, projections of energy needs for the 2020s expect a growth of 5% to 6% for electricity consumption (which has recorded much more values especially for households due to COVID-19 quarantines and curfews), which should be around 1000 kWh per inhabitant annually [
3]. Household consumption surveys from 1985 to 2001, despite limited human development, have shown that spending on electricity and butane increased by 9.1% per year [
4]. Besides, the average consumption of ONE’s residential customers is close to 75 kWh per month, less than 1 kWh/m
2 covered [
5]. At the same time, the need for air conditioning (heating and cooling) is not negligible in many of the Kingdom’s major cities.
Therefore, this country’s energy dependence, its policy, and the energy bill imposed by the residential sector present real constraints that weigh on the current chances of the country’s sustainable development. To cope with this situation, Morocco is committed to an energy efficiency policy, expecting to achieve a primary energy saving of 15% by 2030 by establishing an energy efficiency plan in all sectors (residential, tertiary, industry and agriculture) [
6]. Among these sectors, the building is the second largest consumer of energy with a 25% share of the country’s total energy consumption, of which 18% is reserved for residential and the rest for the tertiary sector [
7]. This consumption is distributed on all of the building needs, of which domestic hot water represents a very important part, and one of the most exciting applications of solar energy in various configurations, the individual solar water heaters (SWH) and collective solar installations (CSI) of residential and tertiary demand characterized by large and regular hot water needs throughout the year. In Morocco, currently most of these needs are satisfied using electric and gas water heaters, despite the high petroleum product tariffs introduced in February 2006 and the current electric kWh prices which make the SWH an appreciated solution than all conventional sources, except for zero-rated or subsidized fuel (butane) scenarios [
8,
9].
This paper involves comparing active and passive energy efficiency solutions for building. The results presented come from the application of first the insulation, double glazing, and finally, all conditions required by Moroccan thermal regulation of building construction as passive solutions. Solar water heaters for the production of domestic hot water are an active solution. The numerical simulation via TRNsys makes it possible to compare different scenarios of the studied solutions, developing a complete comparison. In the literature, several studies have taken the same direction, but a limited number have treated the comparison and the combination of the two action types; they have developed each solution separately. The global aim is to enhance building energy efficiency. Cabeza et al. [
10] have tested the active and passive system on an experimental building prototype located in Puigverd de Lleida, Spain. His study aims to evaluate the energy savings resulting from testing, first different technologies of active solutions such as solar thermal, free cooling, geothermal, etc. Secondly, testing sustainable materials and phase change materials as passive solutions to designing the green building envelope. Gou et al. [
11] combined the two design strategies (active and passive) to develop the first zero energy building in Southeast Asia. This work is based on an existing building and under tropical climate conditions, presenting a cost-effectiveness comparison of passive and active strategies. The results show that passive solutions must be applied on a large scale to have significant economies because of its long payback period compared to the active ones. Another work presented by Buonomano et al. [
12] converges in the same direction. The passive and active effects on the photovoltaic and thermal system’s integration were analyzed by evaluating performance, energy demands, and electrical production. The numerical model was validated and compared to an experimental model integrated into an office building simulated in several European climates; the results achieved a 56.8% to 104.4% energy consumption reduction. All works take this direction intending to improve energy efficiency [
13] in different building types and models, the newest and the existing [
14] even for the historical ones [
15], under several conditions of climate, occupation, construction, and system integration to achieve optimal thermal comfort.
The renewable energy solutions integrated into the building are massively present in the literature. Yan Wang et al. [
16] developed a new energy performance index by studying the integration of renewable energy on school buildings for Germany’s heating needs. The numerical model was developed and simulated; a new performance indicator was developed to evaluate the active solution proposed; the borehole outlet temperature effects and heat recovery efficiency. The results show that the distribution enhanced can achieve a proper thermal comfort level for the case studied, reduce electricity costs, and reduce CO
2 emissions by 5.3 kg per typical winter.
Bougiatioti et al. [
17] studied the integration of active solar systems on an existing building in traditional settlements to develop several possibilities of a smart architectural integration in Cyprus and Greece, where the construction conditions make this action advantageous. This work aims to evaluate gains and difficulties highlighting the need to exploit these benefits under the economic crisis.
In the same directive of highlighting the active solutions role in both energy performance and the indoor built environment, Amilios et al. [
18] studied the active solar systems integration on southern Europe building envelopes. The studies have been carried out under the inhabitants’ comforts requirements, making an energy and environment assessment. This action gives a remarkable reduction of cooling and heating loads in the proposed comprehensive environmental approach. In the present paper, the active solution proposed is the solar water heater (SWH) under two configurations; the individual and the collective. There are numerous studies in the literature focused on the performance and design optimization of residential water heaters, independent of passive solutions, as a performing solution [
19,
20]
Building efficiency studies using passive solutions are pronounced in the literature. Whether the optimization is the key of several works, Chen et al. [
21] optimized a typical passive residential building design in China. The optimal model was carried out under the influence of five weather conditions investigating a sensitivity analysis related to ventilation, outdoor thermal, and solar radiation, studying the proposed model’s applicability. The passive model was studied in several cases in several locations and climate conditions such as hot and humid climates [
22].
In the present work, there are three types of passive solutions proposed. The first solution is improving the building envelope by the insulation, where several works introduced many innovative insulation materials for optimal building efficiency [
23]. Kaushik Biswas et al. [
24] integrate composite insulation boards containing foam-encapsulated vacuum insulation panels. The material’s thermal characterization was done developing a new process manufacturing technology called modified atmosphere insulation to release a significant cost reduction keeping a high performance. Others incorporate the anchors into the insulation in order to strengthen the insulation [
25]. The dynamic material was also present as an insulation proposition [
26], and many other innovative materials were proposed as an excellent cheap alternative such as bio insulation [
27] and wood waste [
28].
The insulation studies focused on materials [
29] and other parameters such as thickness [
30], which was analyzed by Cemek et al. [
31]; they develop a parametric study based on insulation thickness, taking into account several indicators such as energy savings, payback period, and CO
2 emission reductions under the climate conditions of different Turkish cities.
The second passive solution proposed is glazing, which was studied broadly. In the literature, several works detail this solution, focusing on different materials and developed glazing types such as aerogel glazing, PDLC (Polymer Dispersed Liquid Crystal) switchable glazing, and simple and double types [
32,
33,
34,
35,
36].
The present comparison presented was projected on a social building, taking into account different solutions for each type. The study integrated the technological side of active solutions, presenting a comparison between flat plate collectors and the evacuated tube one under two configurations; the individual and the collective, comparing the solar solution with the conventional ones presented in the market, and studying all existing combinations, in order to prove the importance of investing in those solutions compared to passive propositions. This work will defend a suitable solution between a passive and active one for the Moroccan context by taking into account all dimensions such as economic, energetic and the payback period, with the best solution needing to combine all those parameters for an optimal result.
2. Methodology and Case Study
The building studied was modeled with the TRNsys Studio 16 software and TRNBUILD module. The final model makes the energy demand profile evaluation possible, taking into account critical building parameters such as wall composition, facade orientation, zone volume, occupation, and set point temperature. We studied the envelope improvement by using the separate passive solutions of insulation and glazing, integrating complete Moroccan thermal regulations, and applying the active system (solar water heaters), to compare all propositions.
In this section, the building model is presented under its architecture, with the composition of walls and construction materials of the first proposition which will be improved. All simulation hypotheses and parameters will be exhibited (occupancy, ventilation, zoning and masks). Then the solutions studied will be described under inputs and characteristics and the simulation model developed for each proposition (building envelope improvement, individual SWH, and collective SWH).
All simulations were carried out under Moroccan climatic conditions. The Moroccan territory has been subdivided into six climatic zones that are homogenous and circumscribed: Zone 1, Zone 2, Zone 3, Zone 4, Zone 5, and Zone 6. This climatic zoning was adopted for the thermal regulation of buildings in Morocco, and the simulations were done for the six climatic Moroccan zones presented in
Table 1.
2.1. The Building Models
2.1.1. Building Architecture
The building studied in this project is social housing with 300 m
2; it consists of four levels: a ground floor and three floors. The accommodation is composed of 16 apartments, and the main facade faces west.
Figure 1 shows the global modeling of the building with the Google Sketch UP software.
Each floor of the building has four standard apartments of 70 m
2, except the apartments on the ground floor, which are 60 m
2 in size.
Figure 2 shows the architectural plan of the ground floor and a representative floor.
2.1.2. Building Envelope (Construction Materials)
The composition and construction materials of the building are shown in
Table 2.
2.1.3. Simulation Building Model and Hypothesis
Figure 3 shows the simulation model flowchart on TRNsys studio software. The building model was created using TRNBUILD connected to TRNsys by the construction model (type 56). It is a non-geometric scale model with one air node per zone, representing the air volume’s zone heat capacity and the capacities that are closely related to the air node (furniture, for example). Thus, the node’s capacity is a separate entry in addition to the volume of the zone.
The thermal zones: the selected model was considered with 36 thermal zones, 16 heated and air-conditioned thermal zones. Each zone includes the living rooms and rooms of each apartment and 20 thermal buffer zones, which are the bathrooms, kitchens, and halls of all the apartments.
Figure 4 represents the thermal zones considered. Two other hypotheses would have been possible: to model each room by a thermal zone and model each floor as a single zone.
2.1.4. Simulation Hypotheses
It is impossible to reproduce an entire building numerically, and the choice of modeling assumptions is essential. The main assumptions that have been made for the modeling of the building in question are:
Masks: the balconies and the progress of the roof were considered. Thermal solar evacuated tube collectors are composed of vacuum tubes allowing part of the radiation to penetrate, and flat plate thermal solar collectors create shading. However, it was assumed that this shading was minimal and was not considered. No close mask was considered (trees, buildings).
Internal inputs: TRNsys offers the possibility to specify the people’s thermal load according to ISO 7730 and VDI 2078. The VDI 2078 is a German standard. That is why we used the international standard ISO 7730. This standard specifies people’s heat according to their activity types. Each apartment is supposed to be occupied by four seated people releasing 100 watts according to the ISO 7730 standard. The lighting heat input is about 10 W/m2. Besides, the heat of electrical appliances constitutes additional inputs.
Ventilation: The imposed ventilation rates depend on many aspects and differ according to the regulations.
Table 3 groups the values imposed by the RT2012 standard. Since the building in question is a social building, the ventilation mode chosen during the simulation is natural. In heated and air-conditioned areas, the air exchange rate is equal to 0.6 volume/hour. For areas not treated by air conditioning and heating-kitchen, bathroom, and shower, the rate of air renewal chosen is equal to 2.6 volume/hour.
Heating and air conditioning: For heating and cooling, the heating set temperature is equal to 20 °C, and that of the air conditioning is equal to 26 °C. The systems are active at all times under a constant schedule profile and the value of the control is 1.
2.1.5. The Passive Solutions
Four dynamic thermal simulation scenarios were made to evaluate heating and cooling demands. The first conventional scenario concerns the case without any energy efficiency action on the building envelope; it is the study reference case previously presented. The three others are carried out using insulation and double glazing separately, then all requirements of the Moroccan building thermal regulations. The simulation hypotheses (internal inputs, masks, thermal zoning, heating setpoint, air conditioning, etc.) are the same for the four scenarios.
2.1.6. Insulation
The purpose of insulation during this scenario is to respect the thermal transfer coefficient’s values specified by the thermal regulation of Moroccan buildings. The insulation type and thickness are not discussed in this work. The building wall thermal characteristics and floors in different Moroccan thermal zones are shown in
Table 4. The windows are single glazing types with a heat transfer coefficient of U = 5.8 W/m
2·K.
2.1.7. Glazing
In this scenario, the only action to be taken on the building envelope is to respect the heat transfer coefficient values set by the Moroccan thermal regulation of construction (MTRC) for glazing. The building will not be isolated in the six zones’ first simulation scenario, using the single glazing.
Table 5 lists the thermal characteristics of the building envelope for the second scenario.
2.1.8. Moroccan Thermal Regulation of Construction (MTRC)
In this scenario, the MTRC requirements are met for all zones.
Table 6 illustrates the thermal characteristics of the envelope adopted for the simulations.
2.1.9. The Active Solutions
The load profile is adopted for the scenarios studied (individual and collective) as the building schedule need for domestic hot water (
Figure 5), where the hourly coefficient represents the hot water demand at 50 °C in 10 min.
Taking into account the habits of Moroccan consumers of the average social class, the daily need per person for domestic hot water is set at 25 L/day/person for low demand. 37.5 L/day/person for average demand. and 50 L/day/person for a high demand, also by estimating an occupancy of 4 people per apartment.
2.1.10. Individual SWH System
For the individual simulation of solar system (
Figure 6), two types of solar water heaters were considered: the glazed flat plate collector and the evacuated tube collector. Both models of the individual solar system are realized under TRNsys. These used the existing library models: a glazed flat plate collector (FPC) and evacuated tube collector (ETC), the load profile model, a storage tank model, and cold-water temperature variation model.
Table 7 shows the technical characteristics of the collectors and tanks used in this study scenario.
2.1.11. Collective SWH System
The apartment layout is symmetrical. Eight apartments on each side of the building have a common technical shaft. The collective solar system has been treated in two parts, with eight apartments per part that make the entire building (16 apartments). The results obtained will be identical. The configuration of the simulation’s solar system model is the collective solar water heater with collective storage and individualized back-up, which is divided into two circuits: the primary circuit or the solar circuit, which includes the field of collectors, and the solar tank with a capacity that covers the eight apartments’ needs; this circuit is located in the roof relating to the solar collectors and the principal tank. The second circuit contains the individualized tanks with an integrated back-up; it relates to the principal tank and the individual tanks for each apartment, a circulation pump, and controllers which manage the pump activation/deactivation referring to set up temperatures.
Figure 7 illustrates the connection between the primary and secondary circuits of the collective solar water heater system.
Table 8 shows the technical characteristics of the solar tank used in this scenario. For collectors, the same technology types used on the individual case are adopted.
4. Conclusions
Four building simulation scenarios under TRNsys were adopted (conventional, insulated, glazing improvements, and applying the Moroccan standard requirements). The glazing solution does not exceed 6% in savings on total energy demand (including the electrical demand for domestic hot water), while insulation reaches 17% in savings in zone 4. MTRC is the best solution. This solution allows for saving 27% of energy consumption.
The study’s active solutions were under various domestic hot water production scenarios using solar systems, introducing different types of solar collectors, and the variables of the backup systems.
The energy demand comparison of the different conventional domestic hot water production systems and the new actions showed that solar solutions are remarkably efficient. In the same context, ETC and FPC comparisons show that vacuum tube collectors perform better in all Moroccan thermal zones during the winter. During the summer season, both technologies have solar fraction thresholds close to 90%.
The study of the collective solar water heating system on TRNsys reinforces the findings made in individual scenarios: the vacuum tube sensor is significantly efficient.
The savings made by applying the various solutions was two-part: energy and financial. A comparison of energy savings shows that solar water heater solutions are superior to those achieved by building envelope actions. The financial analysis of the savings on the calculated bills shows that solar water heater solutions are attractive in non-subsidized butane gas prices.
This comparative study opens the possibilities of integrating collective solar water heaters in buildings, considering the possible savings. From another point of view of this study’s results, we push to seek the financing solutions of the collective solar projects possible, by green funds proposed by some non-governmental organizations or state organizations.