Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
263342 Energy and Buildings 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Designing low-energy buildings has become a necessity, encouraged by thermal regulations, the need for energy savings and environmental awareness. Computer-aided thermal design of building walls is currently investigated using the latest optimization algorithms. This paper studies building multilayer walls by coupling a direct thermal model with a specific optimization algorithm. The direct problem solution is based on the Laplace transform of the quadrupole method, and then translated by numerical inversion into the time domain by the Fourier series method. The optimization model minimizes a least squares criterion between intended indoor temperatures and a direct response model. The work aims to optimize the thermal insulation and the heat capacity of wall layers and further building heating loads. An indoor temperature evolution is specified under fixed outdoor conditions in order to identify the composition of the building walls using an inverse resolution based on a reflective Newton algorithm applied to a direct quadrupole model.

► A method to determine thermal insulation and heat capacity for new buildings. ► Reflective – Newton method used to solve the problem, regarded as an inverse problem. ► Sensibility of the results to building's parameters numerically investigated.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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