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New effective technologies and materials that have the potential to reduce energy demand with excellent energy efficiency and low environmental impact are urgently required in the Gulf Region. Dynamic insulation, which functions by recycling fabric heat loss back to the building, has been established theoretically and proven in pilot projects. It sets the green, low carbon benchmark for thermal insulation in buildings. This paper presents details of the Eco-Villa, its construction, how the performance of the villa was monitored, and the findings from the initial monitoring phase and the dynamic simulation model (DSM). The villa was tested in two modes, bypass (static) and dynamic. The static U value of the external envelop wall was estimated at 0.24 W/(m2·K) in bypass mode. The theoretical dynamic U value changed from 0.24 to 0.05 W/(m2·K) when the ventilation airflow was varied from 0 to 0.001 m3/(s·m2) (0 to 1 L/(s·m2)), with a further small reduction occurring when the flow rate increased beyond 0.001 m3/(s·m2) (1 L/(s·m2)). The design ventilation rate for the Eco-Villa was 0.0008 m3/(s·m2) (0.8 L/(s·m2)), which yielded a theoretical dynamic U value of 0.063 W/(m2·K) compared to a measured U value of 0.125 W/(m2·K). The reduction in the fabric conduction gain was found to be 41% whereas the estimate from the DSM was 38%. The results demonstrate the fabric energy efficiency improvements that can be achieved through the use of dynamic insulation.

Publication history
Copyright
Acknowledgements

Publication history

Received: 06 April 2011
Revised: 15 January 2012
Accepted: 02 February 2012
Published: 09 May 2012
Issue date: June 2012

Copyright

© Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2012

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Al-Hamad Group of Companies, Dubai Municipality and UAE University for their assistance during the different phases of the project.

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