dc.description.abstract |
Buildings are complex thermally-dynamic structures serving
aesthetic as well as, utilitarian functions. It is essential that
careful planning is undertaken if buildings are to be energy efficient
and cheap to run throughout their-expected life-spans. Although
regulations have recently been introduced requiring the values of
thermal transmittances (i. e. U-values) for walls and roofs of industrial
and domestic buildings, to be less than specified limits, there is no
guarantee that improved design will result.
Also condensation has increasingly become a problem, as natural
ventilation has been reduced, because of the introduction of doubleglazing
and draught proofing.
The use of insulating materials to increase thermal efficiencies
" through the reduction of heat losses may also create problems in
industrial plant and pipework. Metal structures covered with insulants
are thereby hidden from view and so any ensuing corrosion, such as the
general attack upon a low-alloy steel or stress-corrosion cracking of
a stainless steel, may remain undetected until catastrophic failure
occurs. It is, therefore, of utmost importance that the potential for
and enhancement of corrosion due to the addition of insulants should be
carefully considered. The ingress of water or water vapour into the
insulant layer and subsequent leaching is the major cause of corrosion,
and it is essential that steps are taken to prevent or reduce the likelihood
of this occurring while ensuring that metal surfaces are adequately
protected.
There is a need to ascertain the heat and mass-transfer behaviours
of building and insulating materials. Mathematical models require
realistic data to simulate effectively conditions found in real structures.
Too often in the past manufacturers' data for thermal properties, measured
under laboratory conditions, have been used with little attempt to check
on their validity or appropriateness to the conditions which are likely
to be experienced. As desk-top computers become cheaper and more powerful these dangers could well increase. The too prevalent trusting attitude
that computer predictions are absolutely correct together with a potential
lack of understanding of the concepts of heat transfer and moisture
mitigation by the users could result in poorer, rather than better,
designed buildings.
The thermal-probe technique for the measurement of the thermal
conductivities of building structural materials has been assessed.
This rapid transient and potentially cheap technique could be suited
ideally to measurements in such materials. The theoretical basis for
the method has been investigated and the accuracies and repeatabilities
of thermal-probe instruments have been determined in measurements with
paraffin wax. Determinations made with this technique, for masonry
and structural components, were found to agree well with the manufacturer's
thermal conductivity data. However, further developments need to be
made to improve the usefulness of this technique for measuring the
effective conductivities of fibrous insulants.
Also the thermal-probe technique has been assessed for use in
moist materials. Initial investigations with wet-day specimens showed
that the probe diameter had no significant effect on the indicated
values of the apparent thermal conductivity. Tests to measure the
apparent thermal conductivities of aerated concrete blocks, at various
moisture contents, gave results that compared well with other published
data.
Attempts to reduce national energy demands have led to increases
in insulation thicknesses in roof spaces in Northern Europe and North
America. It has generally been assumed that the apparent thermal
conductivity of each material used has been a constant and equal to the
value obtained in the testing laboratory. Examination of the temperature
profiles through various horizontal thicknesses of loose-fill mineral
wool insulants suggests that radiation effects and convection in the upper
surface layers exposed to free air result in much larger apparent thermal
conductivity values than those generally quoted in the literature, and
the magnitudes of these effects also increase with the thickness of the insulant layer. Heat transfer mechanisms have been examined to
explain these phenomena.
Mathematical models of heat transfers through multi-phase materials
have been examined. A model is proposed to describe the thermal conductivity
of high-porosity cellular insulant which includes heat transfers
by conduction through the solid and gaseous phases and by radiation.
Predictions were found to agree well with experimental data for airfilled
polystyrene foams and to be of the correct order of magnitude
for air/fluorocarbon filled polyurethane foams. |
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