Monitoring the Energy-Use Effects of Cool Roofs on California Commercial Buildings | |
Akbari, Hashem ; Levinson, Ronnen ; Konopaki, Steve ; Rainer, Leo | |
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | |
关键词: 25 Energy Storage; 14 Solar Energy; Cold Storage; Monitoring; Solar Reflectors; | |
DOI : 10.2172/840985 RP-ID : LBNL--54770 RP-ID : AC03-76SF00098 RP-ID : 840985 |
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美国|英语 | |
来源: UNT Digital Library | |
【 摘 要 】
Solar-reflective roofs stay cooler in the sun than solar-absorptive roofs. Such ''cool'' roofs achieve lower surface temperatures that reduce heat conduction into the building and the building's cooling load. The California Energy Commission has funded research in which Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) has measured the electricity use and peak demand in commercial buildings to document savings from implementing the Commission's Cool Roofs program. The study seeks to determine the savings achieved by cool roofs by monitoring the energy use of a carefully selected assortment of buildings participating in the Cool Roofs program. Measurements were needed because the peak savings resulting from the application of cool roofs on different types of buildings in the diverse California climate zones have not been well characterized to date. Only a few occupancy categories (e.g., office and retail buildings) have been monitored before this, and those were done under a limited number of climatic conditions. To help rectify this situation, LBNL was tasked to select the buildings to be monitored, measure roof performance before and after replacing a hot roof by a cool roof, and document both energy and peak demand savings resulting from installation of cool roofs. We monitored the effects of cool roofs on energy use and environmental parameters in six California buildings at three different sites: a retail store in Sacramento; an elementary school in San Marcos (near San Diego); and a 4-building cold storage facility in Reedley (near Fresno). The latter included a cold storage building, a conditioning and fruit-palletizing area, a conditioned packing area, and two unconditioned packing areas (counted as one building).
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840985.pdf | 5846KB | download |