Estimation of thermophysical properties using natural signal analysis with heat and moisture transfer model.

Autores:
Martin Ordenes Mizgier, Roberto Lamberts, Saulo Guths
Evento:
Energy and Buildings
Resumo:

Conduction heat transfer through opaque envelope components characterizes the thermal performance of buildings and its consequences in terms of energy consumption and thermal comfort. A building envelope can be thermally described by two parameters: thermal conductivity (λ) and heat capacity (ρ·c). Estimating these thermal properties in situ allows the characterization of real building elements considering different aspects, such as thermal behavior under specific weather conditions, quality variability in materials, local construction technologies and material deterioration. This paper presents a method to estimate the thermal conductivity and volumetric heat capacity of a homogeneous element using a non-destructive test considering natural oscillations. Surface temperature and heat flow are measured in a concrete sample (with known thermal properties) and the data is treated with a signal processing technique. Estimation is carried out with a heat and moisture transfer model. Measurements were performed on six separate days under different sky conditions within a period of one month, to determine the importance of solar radiation as a heat source. Results gave acceptable estimates (average inaccuracy of 10–14%) of both thermophysical properties.