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Energy Efficiency -Windows

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Energy Efficiency -Windows EGEE 102 Savings with Efficient Windows in a Heating Season Cooling Season Heat losses through Doors and Windows Most window manufacturers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy Efficiency -Windows


1
Energy Efficiency -Windows
  • EGEE 102

2
Savings with Efficient Windows in a Heating Season
http//www.efficientwindows.org/energycosts.html
3
Cooling Season
http//www.efficientwindows.org/energycosts.html
4
Heat losses through Doors and Windows
  • Most window manufacturers label their windows
    with a U-value (conductance of heat, Btu/h F
    ft2)
  • U-values are the reciprocals of R-values (h F
    ft2/Btu).
  • The lower the U-value, the less heat is lost
    through the window

5
Factors in Selecting Windows
  • Solar heat gain coefficient (SHGC),
  • Visible transmittance (VT), and
  • Air leakage (AL).
  • The type of window frame
  • The degradation of fabrics by ultra-violet
    radiation

6
Factors affecting the R-value of a window
  • The type of glazing material (e.g., glass,
    plastic, treated glass)
  • The number of layers of glass
  • The size of the air space between the layers of
    glass
  • The thermal resistance or conductance of the
    frame and spacer materials
  • The "tightness" of the installation i.e., air
    leaks.

7
Improved Comfort
8
Advances in Window Technologies
  • Low e-coatings
  • Spectrally Selective Coatings
  • Heat absorbing Glazing
  • Reflective Coatings
  • Gas fills

9
Effect of Glazing
  • Special thin coatings (metal oxide or
    semiconductor) that reduce heat transfer
  • Soft and hard Coatings
  • Cost 10-15 more
  • Reduce Energy loss by 30-50

10
Spectrally Selective Coatings
  • These coatings filter out 40-70 of the heat
    normally transmitted through clear glass while
    allowing full amount of light to be transmitted
  • Customizable
  • Increase or decrease solar gains according to
    aesthetic and climatic effects
  • Reduce 40 of the cooling requirements

11
Gas Filed Windows
  • Filling the space with a less conductive, more
    viscous, or slow-moving gas minimizes the
    convection currents within the space, conduction
    through the gas is reduced, and the overall
    transfer of heat between the inside and outside
    is reduced.
  • Argon and Krypton gas with measurable improvement
    in thermal performance have been used.
  • Argon gas filling provides an effective thermal
    resistance level of R-7 per inch, krypton gas
    provides R-12.5 per inch, and xenon gas provides
    R-20 per inch.

12
Insulation Performance
Conventional
Advanced
13
Smart Windows
14
Normal Window
  • Relative to all other glazing options,
    single-glazed with clear glass allows the highest
    transfer of energy (i.e. heat loss or heat gain
    depending on local climate conditions) while
    permitting the highest daylight transmission

15
Triple-Glazed with Low-Solar-Gain Low-E
Glass(Spectrally Selective)
  • Three glazing layers and two Low-E coatings, 1/2"
    argon gas or 1/4" krypton gas fill between
    glazings, and low-conductance edge spacers. The
    middle glazing layer can be glass or plastic
    film. Some windows use four glazing layers (two
    glass layers and two suspended plastic films).
    With this window, both Low-E coatings are
    spectrally selective in order to minimize solar
    heat gain. This window is best suited for
    climates with both significant heating and
    cooling loads.

16
Improvement in Windows Resistance to Heat Flow
17
Resources
  • http//www.efficientwindows.org/glazing_single.htm
    l
  • http//windows.lbl.gov/
  • http//www.eren.doe.gov/erec/factsheets/eewindows.
    html
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