Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
263736 Energy and Buildings 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Reflective roofs can reduce demand for air conditioning and warming of the atmosphere. Roofs can also host photovoltaic (PV) modules that convert sunlight to electricity. In this study we assess the effects of installing a building integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) roof on an office building in Yuma, AZ. The system consists of thin film PV laminated to a white membrane, which lies above a layer of insulation. The solar absorptance of the roof decreased to 0.38 from 0.75 after installation of the BIPV, lowering summertime daily mean roof upper surface temperatures by about 5 °C. Summertime daily heat influx through the roof deck fell to ±0.1 kWh/m2 from 0.3–1.0 kWh/m2. However, summertime daily heat flux from the ventilated attic into the conditioned space was minimally affected by the BIPV, suggesting that the roof was decoupled from the conditioned space. Daily PV energy production was about 25% of building electrical energy use in the summer. For this building the primary benefit of the BIPV appeared to be its capacity to generate electricity and not its ability to reduce heat flows into the building. Building energy simulations were used to estimate the cooling energy savings and heating energy penalties for more typical buildings.

► We measured effects of installing a building integrated photovoltaic roof (BIPV) on a building. ► BIPV contained thin film solar PV laminated to white membrane, above a layer of insulation. ► Roof solar absorptance decreased to 0.38 from 0.75, lowering roof temperatures by 5 °C. ► Primary benefit of BIPV was electricity generation and not reduced heat flows into the building. ► Building energy simulations predicted energy savings for more typical buildings.

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