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Sustainable Buildings for China Professors Leon Glicksman 1, Yi Jiang 2, and Qingyan (Yan) Chen 1 1 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA 2 Tsinghua University, Beijing, China January 7, 1999
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Background ä Increased purchasing power due to economy growth ä Demand for improved living standards u Winter heating u Summer cooling u Larger floor area per person ä Largest producer of air conditioners
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Background Winter Heating: ä 130 million tons standard coal for urban heating ä 248-260 million tons standard coal for rural heating ä 30% of Chinese total energy consumption ä Heating region is expanded to Shanghai and Wuhan (below Yangtze River)
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Background Summer Cooling: ä 35% of residential buildings in Beijing ä 65% of residential buildings in Shanghai ä 50% of residential buildings in Guangzhou ä 20%-25% annual increase in sales
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Problems ä High demand for electricity in summer ä Heat and noise pollution in micro-climate ä Effect on the environment Future growth (American level?)
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U.S. Buildings ä 1/3 of total energy ä 1/2 of electricity ä 90% of time spent indoors ä Major health problems: indoor climate
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Basic Deficiencies ä Very poor windows, single glazed, poorly fitted ä Little or no insulation ä Absence of summer shading ä Poor maintenance ä Rapid deterioration
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Current Chinese Housing Policy ä Will turn to market system in 1999 ä Will encourage the housing industry to absorb public savings ä Will maintain economic growth Consequences: u High speed growth in housing industry u Demand for high quality housing
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Current Proposed Strategies for Energy Conservation in Chinese Housing ä Insulation of building fabrics ä Improvement of windows to reduce infiltration ä Improvement of district heating systems ä Metering system for heating ä Improvement of lighting systems
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Problems Remaining in Chinese Housing ä Little consideration for summer cooling ä Little consideration of natural ventilation ä Little consideration of building forms ä Little consideration of indoor air quality ä No alternative for room air-conditioners
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An Example of Current Design: A 30 cm (12 inch) concrete wall
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Identify and Develop Solutions for Urban Buildings in China ä Energy efficient ä Simple and generic ä Appropriate for local area ä Cost effective ä Acceptable by local people ä Use of local material and labor
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Environmental Impacts of 1m 2 Brick Wall over 40 years, for Beijing Climate coal fired district heating embodied in wall structure and insulation % of zero insulation case 37cm 5cm 10cm EnergyGlobal Warming Acid Rain Energy Global Warming Global Warming Acid Rain Acid Rain [kg CO 2 equiv.] [MJ] [kg SO 2 equiv.] 10355 28823 7068 2812 1017 6953979 18093 6123
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Building Insulation and Heat Pump (1m 2 of Block Wall, for Beijing Climate) no insulation 10cm insulation 0 36 37 106 2011 0 50 100 150 0 50 100 150 Generation Capacity Savings 69 56 62 Investment Costs for Power Generation US$ 20 13 7 US$ Global Warming from Heating kg CO2 equiv. over 40 years 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 no insulation 5cm insulation 10cm insulation Heating Costs, heat-pump COP 3, electricity from coal, total of 40 years, discount-rate 7% Initial Investment in Insulation Net Savings 25 5cm insulation
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Provide healthy and comfortable living space with little or no energy consumption in summer Key Point:
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The Team ä Technology Development, Design, Evaluation, and Training u MIT, USA u Tsinghua University, China u Tongji University, China ä Construction (Demonstration projects) u Beijing: Vanke Property Development Co. 万科房地产发展公司 万科房地产发展公司 ä 5-floor luxury housing ä 12-floor affordable housing ä 30-32 floor middle-class housing u Shanghai (To be identified)
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Technologies to Improve Building Design ä Ventilation u Natural ventilation u Night cooling and thermal storage walls u Advanced mechanical ventilation systems ä Shading devices and passive solar ä Heat pumps ä Desiccants dehumidification
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Possible Solutions ä Natural ventilation to replace air conditioning ä Thermal mass and night cooling ä Ground coupled heating and cooling systems ä Centralized energy systems ä Improved windows ä Application of vernacular technologies ä Overall building design ä Incentives for adoption of energy efficient designs
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Improvement of Windows ä Double glazing ä New types of frame ä Better insulation ä Lower infiltration with acceptable indoor air quality
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Improvement of District Heating ä High efficiency by CHP ä Large scale network with multi-heat sources ä High reliability by loop network combined with computer added fault detection system ä Special control policy to make buildings being heated equally ä Energy reduced from 50 W/m 2 K to 30 W/m 2 K
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Metering System for Heating ä Largest potential saving in heating ä 25% - 40% savings in test buildings ä Difficulties: u Strongly related to the housing reform u Indoor system has to be changed u High cost for installation
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Energy Savings ä 30% of energy saving by improving the fabric ä Additional 20% of energy saving by better control of the district heating system ä Additional 20% of energy saving by use of metering systems for heating
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A Study in Beijing: Results from 83 apartments ä Measurements of the room air temperatures over a two-month period u Shading by device u Shading by vegetation u Ventilation u Building layout
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Low and Middle Rise Housing
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High Rise Housing
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Thermal Environment kitchen Bedroom WC Living room Balcony North Entrance Door Window RHLog
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Shading Comparison
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No shading Shaded
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Vegetation Comparison
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Little vegetation Lots of vegetation
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Use of Vegetation ä Reduction on solar radiation u Direct radiation on the building surfaces u Reflection from the ground ä Improvement in building micro climate u Reduction of outdoor air temperature u Change of air movement u Improvement on air quality u Decrease of noise
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Comparison between Mechanical and Natural Ventilation Living room Balcony Bed room WCKitchen Entrance Other’s room North
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Comparison between Mechanical and Natural Ventilation Natural Mechanical
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Different Natural Ventilation Designs Bad design Good design
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Comparison of Different Apartment Layouts ä Different apartments in the same flat can result in 300% difference in cooling load ä Careful arrangement of the kitchen, bathroom and corridor can greatly reduce cooling demand
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Use of Air Conditioners: A survey over 300 apartments
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Results from the Survey Why like AC: 1. Cool 40% 2. Modern Technology 34% 3. Climate control 23% 4. Others 3% Why dislike AC: 1. Separated with the nature 47% 2. Draft and noise 26% 3. Energy and first costs 23% 4. Others 4%
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Preliminary Understandings: The survey results ä Comfort does not mean a low air temperature in summer ä Air-conditioning may not be necessary in Beijing with acceptable comfort ä The use of air-conditioning can be reduced greatly in southern China
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ä Be comfortable ä Be healthy ä Be energy efficient ä Be economic ä Be flexible and integral to the culture Sustainable Housing for China
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Current Building Building Energy Distribution (Winter)
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Window and Wall Insulation (Winter)
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Building Energy Distribution (Summer)
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Window and Wall Insulation (Summer)
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Natural Ventilation: Building design
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Natural Ventilation Design
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Natural Ventilation
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Natural ventilation: Airflow at MIT campus
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Comfort Hours with Natural Ventilation
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Night Time Walls Release Heat Maximum Ventilation Day Time Walls Absorb Heat Gains Minimum Ventilation Natural Ventilation: Night cooling
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Shading Devices (Summer)
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Dense Rock kW/mK3.46 kg/m 3 3204 C p J/kg836 m 2 /s1.3E-06 average heat extraction /year: 50MJ/m 2 Ground Temperature Changes with Heat Pump
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Room Small Chiller Cooling coil Heat exchanger Desiccant adsorption sun Desiccant regeneration Outdoor Cooling tower air Operation of Desiccant System Desiccant dehumidification + Cooling Tower Outdoor air Desiccant System
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Desiccant Cooling
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Support ä MIT Kann-Rasmussen Foundation ($200,000/year) ä Tsinghua University National Natural Science Foundation (RMB 1,000,000)
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Objective ä Identify energy efficient and sustainable designs and technologies ä Use economic and appropriate solutions for China ä Build demonstration buildings ä Publicize results to public, designers, officials, and industry ä Prepare design guidelines ä Train designers and planners
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Milestones ä Background data, energy use of residential buildings ä First order evaluation of promising systems for energy efficiency ä In-depth study of several most promising ä Prototype design studies, model, evaluations ä Full-scale demonstrations ä Development of design guidelines
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