SUMMARY
UCLA researchers in the Department of Material Sciences and Engineering have developed tunable interior emissive surfaces for floors, ceilings and walls that can decrease the energy required to heat a room by 67.7% in cold weather and decrease the energy to cool a room by 38.5% in warm weather, compared to traditional interior surface materials.
BACKGROUND
Energy consumption in residential and commercial buildings contributes up to 30% of total greenhouse gas emissions worldwide. In the United States, the buildings sector accounts for 41% of primary energy consumption, of which heating and cooling are responsible for over 35%. While indoor thermal comfort is typically assumed to correlate to the air temperature of an occupant’s space, a person’s perception of comfort is subject to a range of other factors, including heat transfer between a person and the surfaces around that person. If occupant comfort could be maintained through means other than energy-consuming HVAC equipment, considerable energy savings would be possible.
INNOVATION
The reported invention introduces dynamic emissivity surfaces for interior spaces that can be tuned to improve heating and cooling of a building. By adjusting the amount of allowed long-wave infrared wavelengths, the surfaces require less energy to heat or cool a room. The surfaces have already been developed and successfully demonstrated a decrease in the required set point temperature of a room by 7°C, while maintaining occupant comfort. This corresponds to an energy savings of 67.7% in heating during cold weather and a 38.5% energy savings during warm weather. By being able to adjust a person’s environment in response to varying heat loads and conditions, these interior surfaces can maximize energy efficiency and decrease energy consumption year round.
POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS
- Interior space coating for commercial buildings and households
- Walls, floors, ceilings, windows
ADVANTAGES
- Tunable thermal emissivity
- Improved energy efficiency
- Decrease in the set point of up to 7°C while maintaining occupant comfort
- Decrease in the set point for by just 4°C can reduce energy use by 45% and 35% for heating and cooling, respectively
RELATED MATERIALS
STATUS OF DEVELOPMENT
Invention has been successfully prototyped and tested.
RELATED ARTICLES
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2020/10/07/radiative-cooling-climate-change/