Title of article
A perspective on the effect of climate and local environmental variables on the performance of attic radiant barriers in the United States
Author/Authors
Mario A. Medina، نويسنده , , Bryan Young، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
12
From page
1767
To page
1778
Abstract
This paper offers a perspective on how climate and local environmental variables affect the performance of attic radiant barriers across the United States. Transient heat and mass transfer simulations were performed on a vented triangular attic with insulation level of (R-19) and the results were based on integrated hourly ceiling heat fluxes over 3-month periods during the cooling season. The ceiling heat transfer percent reductions ranged from 36.8% in the Tropical Savanna climate to 2.3% in the Mediterranean climate. Peak-hour percent reductions in ceiling heat flux ranged from almost 100% in the Marine West Coast climate to 23% in the Desert climate. The results suggested that local ambient air temperature, humidity, cloud cover index, and altitude had first-order effects. The amount of local solar radiation had no effect on the performance of the systems.
Keywords
Radiant barriers , Building heat transfer , Climate and environment , Building energy conservation
Journal title
Building and Environment
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Building and Environment
Record number
409223
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