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16 pages, 3766 KB  
Article
Evaluation of Energy and CO2 Reduction Through Envelope Retrofitting: A Case Study of a Public Building in South Korea Conducted Using Utility Billing Data
by Hansol Lee and Gyeong-Seok Choi
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4129; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154129 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 437
Abstract
This study empirically evaluates the energy and carbon reduction effects of an envelope retrofit applied to an aging public building in South Korea. Unlike previous studies that primarily relied on simulation-based analyses, this work fills the empirical research gap by using actual utility [...] Read more.
This study empirically evaluates the energy and carbon reduction effects of an envelope retrofit applied to an aging public building in South Korea. Unlike previous studies that primarily relied on simulation-based analyses, this work fills the empirical research gap by using actual utility billing data collected over one pre-retrofit year (2019) and two post-retrofit years (2023–2024). The retrofit included improvements to exterior walls, roofs, and windows, aiming to enhance thermal insulation and airtightness. The analysis revealed that monthly electricity consumption was reduced by 14.7% in 2023 and 8.0% in 2024 compared to that in the baseline year, with corresponding decreases in electricity costs and carbon dioxide emissions. Seasonal variations were evident: energy savings were significant in the winter due to reduced heating demand, while cooling energy use slightly increased in the summer, likely due to diminished solar heat gains resulting from improved insulation. By addressing both heating and cooling impacts, this study offers practical insights into the trade-offs of envelope retrofitting. The findings contribute to the body of knowledge by demonstrating the real-world performance of retrofit technologies and providing data-driven evidence that can inform policies and strategies for improving energy efficiency in public buildings. Full article
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34 pages, 7297 KB  
Article
Passive Design for Residential Buildings in Arid Desert Climates: Insights from the Solar Decathlon Middle East
by Esra Trepci and Edwin Rodriguez-Ubinas
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2731; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152731 - 2 Aug 2025
Viewed by 756
Abstract
This study investigates the effectiveness of passive design in low-rise residential buildings located in arid desert climates, using the Dubai Solar Decathlon Middle East (SDME) competition as a case study. This full-scale experiment offers a unique opportunity to evaluate design solutions under controlled, [...] Read more.
This study investigates the effectiveness of passive design in low-rise residential buildings located in arid desert climates, using the Dubai Solar Decathlon Middle East (SDME) competition as a case study. This full-scale experiment offers a unique opportunity to evaluate design solutions under controlled, realistic conditions; prescriptive, modeled performance; and monitored performance assessments. The prescriptive assessment reviews geometry, orientation, envelope thermal properties, and shading. Most houses adopt compact forms, with envelope-to-volume and envelope-to-floor area ratios averaging 1 and 3.7, respectively, and window-to-wall ratios of approximately 17%, favoring north-facing openings to optimize daylight while reducing heat gain. Shading is strategically applied, horizontal on south façades and vertical on east and west. The thermal properties significantly exceed the local code requirements, with wall performance up to 80% better than that mandated. The modeled assessment uses Building Energy Models (BEMs) to simulate the impact of prescriptive measures on energy performance. Three variations are applied: assigning minimum local code requirements to all the houses to isolate the geometry (baseline); removing shading; and applying actual envelope properties. Geometry alone accounts for up to 60% of the variation in cooling intensity; shading reduces loads by 6.5%, and enhanced envelopes lower demand by 14%. The monitored assessment uses contest-period data. Indoor temperatures remain stable (22–25 °C) despite outdoor fluctuations. Energy use confirms that houses with good designs and airtightness have lower cooling loads. Airtightness varies widely (avg. 14.5 m3/h/m2), with some well-designed houses underperforming due to construction flaws. These findings highlight the critical role of passive design as the first layer for improving the energy performance of the built environment and advancing toward net-zero targets, specifically in arid desert climates. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Climate-Responsive Architectural and Urban Design)
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19 pages, 3671 KB  
Article
Sustainable Benzoxazine Copolymers with Enhanced Thermal Stability, Flame Resistance, and Dielectric Tunability
by Thirukumaran Periyasamy, Shakila Parveen Asrafali and Jaewoong Lee
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2092; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152092 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 470
Abstract
Benzoxazine resins are gaining attention for their impressive thermal stability, low water uptake, and strong mechanical properties. In this work, two new bio-based benzoxazine monomers were developed using renewable arbutin: one combined with 3-(2-aminoethylamino) propyltrimethoxysilane (AB), and the other with furfurylamine (AF). Both [...] Read more.
Benzoxazine resins are gaining attention for their impressive thermal stability, low water uptake, and strong mechanical properties. In this work, two new bio-based benzoxazine monomers were developed using renewable arbutin: one combined with 3-(2-aminoethylamino) propyltrimethoxysilane (AB), and the other with furfurylamine (AF). Both were synthesized using a simple Mannich-type reaction and verified through FT-IR and 1H-NMR spectroscopy. By blending these monomers in different ratios, copolymers with adjustable thermal, dielectric, and surface characteristics were produced. Thermal analysis showed that the materials had broad processing windows and cured effectively, while thermogravimetric testing confirmed excellent heat resistance—especially in AF-rich blends, which left behind more char. The structural changes obtained during curing process were monitored using FT-IR, and XPS verified the presence of key elements like carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and silicon. SEM imaging revealed that AB-based materials had smoother surfaces, while AF-based ones were rougher; the copolymers fell in between. Dielectric testing showed that increasing AF content raised both permittivity and loss, and contact angle measurements confirmed that surfaces ranged from water-repellent (AB) to water-attracting (AF). Overall, these biopolymers (AB/AF copolymers) synthesized from arbutin combine environmental sustainability with customizability, making them strong candidates for use in electronics, protective coatings, and flame-resistant composite materials. Full article
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28 pages, 3635 KB  
Article
Optimizing Energy Performance of Phase-Change Material-Enhanced Building Envelopes Through Novel Performance Indicators
by Abrar Ahmad and Shazim Ali Memon
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2678; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152678 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1196
Abstract
Over recent decades, phase-change materials (PCMs) have gained prominence as latent-heat thermal energy storage systems in building envelopes because of their high energy density. However, only PCMs that complete a full daily charge–discharge cycle can deliver meaningful energy and carbon-emission savings. This simulation [...] Read more.
Over recent decades, phase-change materials (PCMs) have gained prominence as latent-heat thermal energy storage systems in building envelopes because of their high energy density. However, only PCMs that complete a full daily charge–discharge cycle can deliver meaningful energy and carbon-emission savings. This simulation study introduces a methodology that simultaneously optimizes PCM integration for storage efficiency, indoor thermal comfort, and energy savings. Two new indicators are proposed: overall storage efficiency (ECn), which consolidates heating and cooling-efficiency ratios into a single value, and the performance factor (PF), which quantifies the PCM’s effectiveness in maintaining thermal comfort. Using EnergyPlus v8.9 coupled with DesignBuilder, a residential ASHRAE 90.1 mid-rise apartment was modeled in six warm-temperate (Cfb) European cities for the summer period from June 1 to August 31. Four paraffin PCMs (RT-22/25/28/31 HC, 20 mm thickness) were tested under natural and controlled ventilation strategies, with windows opening 50% when outdoor air was at least 2 °C cooler than indoors. Simulation outputs were validated against experimental cubicle data, yielding a mean absolute indoor temperature error ≤ 4.5%, well within the ±5% tolerance commonly accepted for building thermal simulations. The optimum configuration—RT-25 HC with temperature-controlled ventilation—achieved PF = 1.0 (100% comfort compliance) in all six cities and delivered summer cooling-energy savings of up to 3376 kWh in Paris, the highest among the locations studied. Carbon-emission reductions reached 2254 kg CO2-e year−1, and static payback periods remained below the assumed 50-year building life at a per kg PCM cost of USD 1. The ECn–PF framework, therefore, provides a transparent basis for selecting cost-effective, energy-efficient, and low-carbon PCM solutions in warm-temperate buildings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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35 pages, 638 KB  
Review
The Influence of Circadian Rhythms on Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) Effects: Theoretical and Practical Considerations
by James Chmiel and Agnieszka Malinowska
Cells 2025, 14(15), 1152; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells14151152 - 25 Jul 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 933
Abstract
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can modulate cortical excitability in a polarity-specific manner, yet identical protocols often produce inconsistent outcomes across sessions or individuals. This narrative review proposes that much of this variability arises from the brain’s intrinsic temporal landscape. Integrating evidence from [...] Read more.
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can modulate cortical excitability in a polarity-specific manner, yet identical protocols often produce inconsistent outcomes across sessions or individuals. This narrative review proposes that much of this variability arises from the brain’s intrinsic temporal landscape. Integrating evidence from chronobiology, sleep research, and non-invasive brain stimulation, we argue that tDCS produces reliable, polarity-specific after-effects only within a circadian–homeostatic “window of efficacy”. On the circadian (Process C) axis, intrinsic alertness, membrane depolarisation, and glutamatergic gain rise in the late biological morning and early evening, whereas pre-dawn phases are marked by reduced excitability and heightened inhibition. On the homeostatic (Process S) axis, consolidated sleep renormalises synaptic weights, widening the capacity for further potentiation, whereas prolonged wakefulness saturates plasticity and can even reverse the usual anodal/cathodal polarity rules. Human stimulation studies mirror this two-process fingerprint: sleep deprivation abolishes anodal long-term-potentiation-like effects and converts cathodal inhibition into facilitation, while stimulating at each participant’s chronotype-aligned (phase-aligned) peak time amplifies and prolongs after-effects even under equal sleep pressure. From these observations we derive practical recommendations: (i) schedule excitatory tDCS after restorative sleep and near the individual wake-maintenance zone; (ii) avoid sessions at high sleep pressure or circadian troughs; (iii) log melatonin phase, chronotype, recent sleep and, where feasible, core temperature; and (iv) consider mild pre-heating or time-restricted feeding as physiological primers. By viewing Borbély’s two-process model and allied metabolic clocks as adjustable knobs for plasticity engineering, this review provides a conceptual scaffold for personalised, time-sensitive tDCS protocols that could improve reproducibility in research and therapeutic gain in the clinic. Full article
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33 pages, 7605 KB  
Article
Dynamic Heat Transfer Modelling and Thermal Performance Evaluation for Cadmium Telluride-Based Vacuum Photovoltaic Glazing
by Changyu Qiu, Hongxing Yang and Kaijun Dong
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2612; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152612 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 339
Abstract
Building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) windows present a viable path towards carbon neutrality in the building sector. However, conventional BIPV windows, such as semi-transparent photovoltaic (STPV) glazings, still suffer from inadequate thermal insulation, which limits their effectiveness across different climate conditions. To address this issue, [...] Read more.
Building-integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) windows present a viable path towards carbon neutrality in the building sector. However, conventional BIPV windows, such as semi-transparent photovoltaic (STPV) glazings, still suffer from inadequate thermal insulation, which limits their effectiveness across different climate conditions. To address this issue, the cadmium telluride-based vacuum PV glazing has been developed to enhance the thermal performance of BIPV applications. To fully understand the complex thermal behaviour under real-world operational scenarios, this study introduces a one-dimensional transient heat transfer model that can efficiently capture the time-dependent thermal dynamics of this novel glazing system. Based on the numerical solutions using the explicit finite difference method (FDM), the temperature profile of the vacuum PV glazing can be obtained dynamically. Consequently, the heat gain of the semi-transparent vacuum PV glazing can be calculated under time-varying outdoor and indoor conditions. The validated heat transfer model was applied under four different scenarios, viz. summer daytime, summer nighttime, winter daytime, and winter nighttime, to provide a detailed analysis of the dynamic thermal behaviour, including the temperature variation and the energy flow. The dynamic thermal characteristics of the vacuum PV glazing calculated by the transient heat transfer model demonstrate its excellent thermal insulation and solar control capabilities. Moreover, the thermal performance of vacuum PV glazing was compared with a standard double-pane window under various weather conditions of a typical summer day and a typical winter day. The results indicate that the vacuum PV glazing can effectively minimise both heat gain and heat loss. The fluctuation of the inner surface temperature can be controlled within a limited range away from the set point of the indoor room temperature. Therefore, the vacuum PV glazing contributes to stabilising the temperature of the indoor environment despite the fluctuating solar radiation and periodic outdoor temperature. It is suggested that the vacuum PV glazing has the potential to enhance the climate adaptability of BIPV windows under different climate backgrounds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Renewable Energy in Buildings)
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18 pages, 5775 KB  
Article
Precision Solar Spectrum Filtering in Aerogel Windows via Synergistic ITO-Ag Nanoparticle Doping for Hot-Climate Energy Efficiency
by Huilin Yang, Maoquan Huang, Mingyang Yang, Xuankai Zhang and Mu Du
Gels 2025, 11(7), 553; https://doi.org/10.3390/gels11070553 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 281
Abstract
Windows are a major contributor to energy loss in buildings, particularly in hot climates where solar radiation heat gain significantly increases cooling demand. An ideal energy-efficient window must maintain high visible light transmittance while effectively blocking ultraviolet and near-infrared radiation, presenting a significant [...] Read more.
Windows are a major contributor to energy loss in buildings, particularly in hot climates where solar radiation heat gain significantly increases cooling demand. An ideal energy-efficient window must maintain high visible light transmittance while effectively blocking ultraviolet and near-infrared radiation, presenting a significant challenge for material design. We propose a plasma silica aerogel window utilizing the local surface plasmon resonance effect of plasmonic nanoparticles. This design incorporates indium tin oxide (ITO) nanospheres (for broad-band UV/NIR blocking) and silver (Ag) nanocylinders (targeted blocking of the 0.78–0.9 μm NIR band) co-doped into the silica aerogel. This design achieves a visible light transmittance of 0.8, a haze value below 0.12, and a photothermal ratio of 0.91. Building simulations indicate that compared to traditional glass, this window can achieve annual energy savings of 20–40% and significantly reduce the economic losses associated with traditional glass, providing a feasible solution for sustainable buildings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gel Applications)
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28 pages, 5769 KB  
Article
Assessment and Enhancement of Indoor Environmental Quality in a School Building
by Ronan Proot-Lafontaine, Abdelatif Merabtine, Geoffrey Henriot and Wahid Maref
Sustainability 2025, 17(12), 5576; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17125576 - 17 Jun 2025
Viewed by 553
Abstract
Achieving both indoor environmental quality (IEQ) and energy efficiency in school buildings remains a challenge, particularly in older structures where renovation strategies often lack site-specific validation. This study evaluates the impact of energy retrofits on a 1970s primary school in France by integrating [...] Read more.
Achieving both indoor environmental quality (IEQ) and energy efficiency in school buildings remains a challenge, particularly in older structures where renovation strategies often lack site-specific validation. This study evaluates the impact of energy retrofits on a 1970s primary school in France by integrating in situ measurements with a validated numerical model for forecasting energy demand and IEQ. Temperature, humidity, and CO2 levels were recorded before and after renovations, which included insulation upgrades and an air handling unit replacement. Results indicate significant improvements in winter thermal comfort (PPD < 20%) with a reduced heating water temperature (65 °C to 55 °C) and stable indoor air quality (CO2 < 800 ppm), without the need for window ventilation. Night-flushing ventilation proved effective in mitigating overheating by shifting peak temperatures outside school hours, contributing to enhanced thermal regulation. Long-term energy consumption analysis (2019–2022) revealed substantial reductions in gas and electricity use, 15% and 29% of energy saving for electricity and gas, supporting the effectiveness of the applied renovation strategies. However, summer overheating (up to 30 °C) persisted, particularly in south-facing upper floors with extensive glazing, underscoring the need for additional optimization in solar gain management and heating control. By providing empirical validation of renovation outcomes, this study bridges the gap between theoretical predictions and real-world effectiveness, offering a data-driven framework for enhancing IEQ and energy performance in aging school infrastructure. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Insights into Indoor Air Quality in Sustainable Buildings)
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27 pages, 7310 KB  
Article
Energy and Thermal Comfort Performance of Vacuum Glazing-Based Building Envelope Retrofit in Subtropical Climate: A Case Study
by Changyu Qiu, Hongxing Yang and Kaijun Dong
Buildings 2025, 15(12), 2038; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15122038 - 13 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1073
Abstract
In the context of global warming, building transformation takes on a dual responsibility to be more energy-efficient and sustainable for climate change mitigation and to be more climate-resilient for occupants’ comfort. The building energy retrofitting is an urgent need due to the large [...] Read more.
In the context of global warming, building transformation takes on a dual responsibility to be more energy-efficient and sustainable for climate change mitigation and to be more climate-resilient for occupants’ comfort. The building energy retrofitting is an urgent need due to the large amount of existing building stock. Especially in high-rise and high-density cities under a subtropical climate, like Hong Kong, existing buildings with large glazed façades face the challenges of high energy consumption and overheating risks. An advanced glazing system, namely the vacuum insulating glazing (VIG), shows the potential for effective building envelope retrofitting due to its excellent thermal insulation ability. Yet, its performance for practical applications in the subtropical region has not been investigated. To enhance the energy performance and thermal comfort of existing high-rise buildings, this study proposed a novel retrofitting approach by integrating the VIG into the existing window system as secondary glazing. Field experiments were conducted in a commercial building in Hong Kong to investigate the thermal performance of the VIG retrofit application under real-world conditions. Furthermore, the energy-saving potential and thermal comfort performance of the VIG retrofit were evaluated by building energy simulations. The experimental results indicate that the VIG retrofit can effectively stabilize the fluctuation of the inside glass surface temperature and significantly reduce the heat gain by up to 85.3%. The simulation work shows the significant energy-saving potential of the VIG retrofit in Hong Kong. For the VIG retrofit cases under different scenarios, the energy-saving potential varies from 12.5% to 29.7%. In terms of occupants’ thermal comfort, the VIG retrofit can significantly reduce the overheating risk and improve thermal satisfaction by 9.2%. Due to the thermal comfort improvement, the cooling setpoint could be reset to 1 °C higher without compromising the overall thermal comfort. The average payback period for the VIG application is 5.8 years and 8.6 years for the clear glass retrofit and the coated glass retrofit, respectively. Therefore, the VIG retrofit approach provides a promising solution for building envelope retrofits under subtropical climate conditions. It not only benefits building owners and occupants but also contributes to achieving long-term climate resilience and the carbon neutrality of urban areas. Full article
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20 pages, 984 KB  
Article
Study on Performance Index of Near-Zero-Energy Consumption Residence in Towns of Southern Jiangsu Province
by Lei Jiang, Lei Zhang, Weidong Lu, Jingjing Xu and Daiwei Luo
Buildings 2025, 15(11), 1922; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15111922 - 2 Jun 2025
Viewed by 401
Abstract
This study initially examined the thermal comfort of rural residents in southern Jiangsu, analyzing their tolerance levels and expected temperature ranges during winter and summer. Subsequently, Design Builder 7.02.004 software was utilized to simulate the energy consumption of typical residential buildings. Furthermore, an [...] Read more.
This study initially examined the thermal comfort of rural residents in southern Jiangsu, analyzing their tolerance levels and expected temperature ranges during winter and summer. Subsequently, Design Builder 7.02.004 software was utilized to simulate the energy consumption of typical residential buildings. Furthermore, an orthogonal test method was employed to investigate the significant relationships among seven factors influencing building energy consumption in both winter and summer. These factors include external wall heat transfer coefficient, roof heat transfer coefficient, external window heat transfer coefficient, external window solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC), window-to-wall-area ratio, air tightness, and building orientation. Finally, based on the findings from the thermal comfort study, recommended passive design parameters for near-zero-energy residential buildings in southern Jiangsu were proposed. This provides valuable references for the future construction efforts of such buildings within this region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)
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38 pages, 2697 KB  
Systematic Review
A Systematic Review on the Research and Development of Adaptive Buildings
by Yaolin Lin, Ling Xu, Wei Yang, Lin Tian and Melissa Chan
Buildings 2025, 15(10), 1593; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15101593 - 8 May 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1374
Abstract
Rapid urbanization and industrialization have led to great changes to the climate, such as global warming, urban heat islands, and frequent fluctuations in ambient temperature, and also a large amount of building energy consumption. Adaptive building provides an appropriate solution to maintain low [...] Read more.
Rapid urbanization and industrialization have led to great changes to the climate, such as global warming, urban heat islands, and frequent fluctuations in ambient temperature, and also a large amount of building energy consumption. Adaptive building provides an appropriate solution to maintain low energy consumption under various indoor and outdoor conditions and therefore has increasingly gained attention recently. Yet there is no clear definition on adaptive buildings and the current literature often focuses on the building envelope and overlooks buildings’ mechanical system, which is also an important part of the building system for responding to the indoor requirements and outdoor conditions. This article presents a systematic review on the research and development of adaptive buildings to address the identified research gaps. Firstly, it introduces and discusses the definition and evolution of the concept of adaptive building. Secondly, it reviews the adaptive building envelope technologies of roof, wall and window. Thirdly, it investigates the research progress on the adaptive mechanical system, especially lighting and air-conditioning systems. Lastly, it demonstrates practical applications of adaptive buildings and provides recommendations on future research directions on adaptive buildings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Building Energy-Saving Technology—3rd Edition)
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25 pages, 2250 KB  
Article
Simulation of Heat Pump with Heat Storage and PV System—Increase in Self-Consumption in a Polish Household
by Jakub Szymiczek, Krzysztof Szczotka and Piotr Michalak
Energies 2025, 18(9), 2325; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18092325 - 2 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1246
Abstract
The use of renewables in heat production requires methods to overcome the issue of asynchronous heat load and energy production. The most effective method for analyzing the intricate thermal dynamics of an existing building is through transient simulation, utilizing real-world weather data. This [...] Read more.
The use of renewables in heat production requires methods to overcome the issue of asynchronous heat load and energy production. The most effective method for analyzing the intricate thermal dynamics of an existing building is through transient simulation, utilizing real-world weather data. This approach offers a far more nuanced understanding than static calculations, which often fail to capture the dynamic interplay of environmental factors and building performance. Transient simulations, by their nature, model the building’s thermal behavior over time, reflecting the continuous fluctuations in temperature, solar radiation, and wind speed. Leveraging actual meteorological data enables the simulation model to faithfully capture system dynamics under realistic operational scenarios. This is crucial for evaluating the effectiveness of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, identifying potential energy inefficiencies, and assessing the impact of various energy-saving measures. The simulation can reveal how the building’s thermal mass absorbs and releases heat, how solar gains influence indoor temperatures, and how ventilation patterns affect heat losses. In this paper, a household heating system consisting of an air source heat pump, PV, and buffer tank is simulated and analyzed. The 3D model accurately represents the building’s geometry and thermal properties. This virtual representation serves as the basis for calculating heat losses and gains, considering factors such as insulation levels, window characteristics, and building orientation. The approach is based on the calculation of building heat load based on a 3D model and EN ISO 52016-1 standard. The heat load is modeled based on air temperature and sun irradiance. The heating system is modeled in EBSILON professional 16.00 software for the calculation of transient 10 min time step heat production during the heating season. The results prove that a buffer tank with the right heat production control system can efficiently increase the auto consumption of self-produced PV electric energy, leading to a reduction in environmental effects and higher economic profitability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Refrigeration and Heat Pump Technologies)
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22 pages, 1936 KB  
Article
Impact of Window Size Modification on Energy Consumption in UK Residential Buildings: A Feasibility and Simulation Study
by Yue Zhang, Siddig Omer and Ruichang Hu
Sustainability 2025, 17(7), 3258; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17073258 - 6 Apr 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 800
Abstract
This study investigates window renovation strategies for a detached building in Belper, UK, analyzing double- and triple-glazed, vacuum, and low-E vacuum windows with varying gas fillings, pillar radii, and spacing. The results reveal that increasing glass layers reduces energy consumption, while a larger [...] Read more.
This study investigates window renovation strategies for a detached building in Belper, UK, analyzing double- and triple-glazed, vacuum, and low-E vacuum windows with varying gas fillings, pillar radii, and spacing. The results reveal that increasing glass layers reduces energy consumption, while a larger pillar radius decreases efficiency. More pillars improve window performance. For windows with the same U-value, a higher SHGC enhances energy efficiency by maximizing solar heat gain, particularly in colder climates. Conversely, reducing the U-value while maintaining a constant SHGC enhances insulation and minimizes heat loss. The study emphasizes the necessity of balancing U-value and SHGC for optimal window performance in different climates. The most effective strategy involves using a low-E vacuum window with a 0.25 mm pillar radius and 40 mm spacing while doubling the south-facing window area, leading to a 7.01 GJ heating load reduction—a 27.9% improvement over modifying the window type alone. Additionally, a key ratio, SHGC/(UwindowUwall), is introduced to assess window size modifications. The results indicate that enlarging windows is beneficial when solar heat gain surpasses additional heat loss, underscoring the importance of balancing heat conduction and solar energy utilization in energy-efficient building design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Architecture: Energy Efficiency in Buildings)
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22 pages, 5465 KB  
Article
The Solar Shading Performance of the Multi-Angled Façade System and Its Impact on the Sustainable Improvement of the Buildings
by Loay Hannoudi, Noha Saleeb and George Dafoulas
Energies 2025, 18(7), 1565; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18071565 - 21 Mar 2025
Viewed by 627
Abstract
This research paper explores the visual potential of the multi-angled façade system, allowing office employees to achieve optimal exposure to the external environment through the room façade. This contributes to sustainability objectives by enhancing indoor climate quality, promoting health and well-being, and aligning [...] Read more.
This research paper explores the visual potential of the multi-angled façade system, allowing office employees to achieve optimal exposure to the external environment through the room façade. This contributes to sustainability objectives by enhancing indoor climate quality, promoting health and well-being, and aligning with the UN Sustainable Development Goals 3, 9, and 11. This façade concept provides a solution to the issue of shading devices being fully closed for long periods due to intense solar radiation on the room’s window. The concept of a multi-angled window involves incorporating two differently oriented window sections within each façade along a vertical axis (right and left), rather than tilting them upward or downward. The larger section is oriented more toward the north to maximize daylight access and external views, while the smaller section faces south to enhance passive solar heating. The visual potential is assessed based on the periods when the solar shading devices are not fully closed—meaning one section of the multi-angled façade may remain open while the other is shaded. To evaluate this, along with the resulting energy consumption and indoor climate, the software program IDA ICE version 4.8 is utilized. Simulation results indicate that the duration of complete shading closure is significantly lower for a multi-angled façade compared to a flat façade, in some instances nearly half, thereby improving visual comfort, daylight availability, and heat gain while simultaneously reducing spatial energy consumption. Full article
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20 pages, 11499 KB  
Article
Window Bevel Shape Optimization for Sustainable Daylighting and Thermal Performance in Buildings
by Leszek Krzemień and Marcin Strojecki
Sustainability 2025, 17(3), 1111; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17031111 - 29 Jan 2025
Viewed by 998
Abstract
Thick insulation of external walls is the standard method for passive reduction in heating costs in residential buildings in the northern climate zone. However, increasing the insulation thickness worsens the lighting conditions inside the rooms. This work demonstrates that diagonal cuts in the [...] Read more.
Thick insulation of external walls is the standard method for passive reduction in heating costs in residential buildings in the northern climate zone. However, increasing the insulation thickness worsens the lighting conditions inside the rooms. This work demonstrates that diagonal cuts in the insulation around windows (bevels) significantly increase the light entering the building without compromising its heat resistance. The optimized window bevel shape is a cost-effective method for improving daylighting in residential buildings. The research employs traditional finite-element modeling (FEM) alongside a novel method that allows for the simultaneous calculation of heat transfer and daylight distribution within the same simulation environment and geometry. The study analyzes the impact of various incision depths and angles on both daylighting and the thermal performance of the building envelope. The results show that the optimal bevel geometry dependent on the insulation thickness without a negative impact on thermal properties may be found. In addition, a traditional daylight analysis shows that for thick insulation, the introduction of bevels makes the difference between satisfactory and inadequate lighting conditions in the room. Moreover, reduced use of insulating material and resulting solar gains may significantly increase the overall sustainability of modern buildings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Energy Efficiency and Environmental Performance in Buildings)
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