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Seasonal influence of leaf area index (LAI) on the energy performance of a green facade

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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/2969
View/Open: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85118117754&doi=10.1016%2fj.buildenv.2021.108497&partnerID=40&md5=97701ac96d32370072e2a48d4dbbfddf
ISSN: 0360-1323
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2021.108497
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Author
Pérez, G.; Coma Arpón, Julià; Cháfer Nicolas, Marta; Cabeza Fabra, Luisa Fernanda
Date
2022
Subject/s

Fachada verde

Plantas tropicales

Ahorro energético

Refrigeración - estrategias pasivas

Ensayo No Destructivo (END)

Temperatura de referencia

Confort térmico

Edificación residencial

Comportamiento térmico

Unesco Subject/s

3106.05 Productos

3311.02 Ingeniería de Control

3311.16 Instrumentos de Medida de la Temperatura

3305.14 Viviendas

Abstract

Double-skin green facades using deciduous climbing plants are easy-to-implement construction systems stated to be effective energy-saving tools for buildings during cooling periods. Although the leaf area index (LAI) has been identified as a key parameter for characterizing foliar density and, consequently, the green facade's potential as a passive tool for energy savings, a lack of knowledge still remains on this index's values and measurement methods. The present paper aims to characterize the annual LAI evolution of a Boston ivy double-screen green facade under Mediterranean continental climate (Csa), by using an original non-destructive methodology during two consecutive years. Moreover, the influence of the green facade's foliage density, characterized by LAI, on the external building wall temperatures and the energy consumption by season and orientation was addressed. From the results it can be noticed that LAI changed seasonally over the course of five periods with a related differentiated energy performance: early summer (LAI of 4.8; 54% savings for cooling), late summer (LAI of 4.4; 30% savings for cooling), autumn (LAI of 1.7; 5.4% increase for heating), winter (LAI of 0.9; 5.4% increase for heating), and spring (LAI of 3.6; 11.9% increase for heating). The increase of energy consumption during leaf-off stage was directly linked to woody material and remaining leaves. Two crucial effects were identified and characterized: firstly, the influence of facade orientation and, secondly, a slight “insulation effect” at night, with the green screen acting as a thermal barrier. © 2021 The Authors

Double-skin green facades using deciduous climbing plants are easy-to-implement construction systems stated to be effective energy-saving tools for buildings during cooling periods. Although the leaf area index (LAI) has been identified as a key parameter for characterizing foliar density and, consequently, the green facade's potential as a passive tool for energy savings, a lack of knowledge still remains on this index's values and measurement methods. The present paper aims to characterize the annual LAI evolution of a Boston ivy double-screen green facade under Mediterranean continental climate (Csa), by using an original non-destructive methodology during two consecutive years. Moreover, the influence of the green facade's foliage density, characterized by LAI, on the external building wall temperatures and the energy consumption by season and orientation was addressed. From the results it can be noticed that LAI changed seasonally over the course of five periods with a related differentiated energy performance: early summer (LAI of 4.8; 54% savings for cooling), late summer (LAI of 4.4; 30% savings for cooling), autumn (LAI of 1.7; 5.4% increase for heating), winter (LAI of 0.9; 5.4% increase for heating), and spring (LAI of 3.6; 11.9% increase for heating). The increase of energy consumption during leaf-off stage was directly linked to woody material and remaining leaves. Two crucial effects were identified and characterized: firstly, the influence of facade orientation and, secondly, a slight “insulation effect” at night, with the green screen acting as a thermal barrier. © 2021 The Authors

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