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PASSIVE METHODS OF
COOLING
CLIMATOLOGY
D.CHENNA KESHAVA REDDY
19171AA016
• Passive cooling systems are least expensive means of
cooling a home which maximizes the efficiency of the
building envelope without any use of mechanical devices.
•It rely on natural heat-sinks to remove heat from the
building. They derive cooling directly from evaporation,
convection, and radiation without using any intermediate
electrical devices.
•All passive cooling strategies rely on daily changes in
temperature and relative humidity.
•The applicability of each system depends on the climatic
conditions.
•These design strategies reduce heat gains to internal
spaces.
PASSIVE COOLING
PASSIVE COOLING METHODS
 Natural Ventilation
 Shading
 Wind Towers
 Courtyard Effect
 Earth Air Tunnels
 Evaporative Cooling
 Passive Down Draught Cooling
 Roof Sprays
METHODS OF COOLING
• Outdoor breezes create air movement through the house interior by
the 'push-pull' effect of positive air pressure on the windward side and
negative pressure (suction) on the leeward side.
•In order to have a good natural ventilation, openings must be placed
at opposite pressure zones.
•Also, designers often choose to enhance natural ventilation using tall
spaces called stacks in buildings.
NATURAL VENTILATION
• With openings near the top of
stacks, warm air can escape
whereas cooler air enters the
building from openings near the
ground.
• The windows, play a dominant
role in inducing indoor ventilation
due to wind forces.
•In most homes, exhausting the warm air
quickly can be a problem.
•With the design of high ceilings throughout
the breeze zone combined with clerestory
windows at the 14′ ceiling height on three
walls, the rising hot air is allowed to escape
which in turn does two things.
•Firstly the rising air creates a low pressure
zone on the cool mass floor, pulling air along
the floor from other areas of the house as
well as any open doors.
•Secondly the rising and escaping air creates
an interior low pressure that should pull in
large volumes or exterior air from the patio
doors. •Depending on the primary wind
direction and which doors are opened relative
to time of day and shade, we can create a
breeze of cooler incoming air.
•The most effective method of cooling a building is to shade
windows, walls and roof of building from direct solar
radiation.
•Heavily insulated walls and roofs need less shading.
•Can use overhangs on outside facade of the building.
SHADING
•Solar control is a critical requirement for both cooling-load
dominated and passively solar-heated buildings. Each project
should be evaluated depending on its relative cooling needs:
•Extend the overhang beyond the sides of the window to
prevent solar gain from the side.
•Use slatted or louvered shades to allow more daylight to
enter, while shading windows from direct sunlight.
•Reduce solar heat gain by recessing windows into the wall.
SHADING
•In a wind tower, the hot air enters the
tower through the openings in the tower,
gets cooled, and thus becomes heavier and
sinks down.
•The inlet and outlet of rooms induce cool
air movement.
•In the presence of wind, air is cooled more
effectively and flows faster down the tower
and into the living area.
•After a whole day of air exchanges, the
tower becomes warm in the evenings.
•During the night, cooler ambient air comes
in contact with the bottom of the tower
through the rooms.
WIND TOWER
•The tower walls absorb heat during
daytime and release it at night, warming
the cool night air in the tower.
• Warm air moves up, creating an upward
draft, and draws cool night air through
the doors and windows into the building.
•The system works effectively in hot and
dry climates where fluctuations are high
.•A wind tower works well for individual
units not for multi-storeyed apartments.
•In dense urban areas, the wind tower
has to be long enough to be able to catch
enough air.
• Also protection from driving rain is
difficult.
• Due to incident solar radiation in a courtyard, the air gets warmer
and rises.
• Cool air from the ground level flows through the louvered openings
of rooms surrounding a courtyard, thus producing air flow.
• At night, the warm roof surfaces get cooled by convection and
radiation.
•If this heat exchange reduces roof surface temperature to wet bulb
temperature of air, condensation of atmospheric moisture occurs on
the roof and the gain due to condensation limits further cooling.
COURTYARD EFFECT
• If the roof surfaces are sloped towards the internal courtyard, the cooled air sinks
into the court and enters the living space through low-level openings, gets warmed
up, and leaves the room through higher-level openings.
• However, care should be taken that the courtyard does not receive intense solar
radiation, which would lead to conduction and radiation heat gains into the building.
•Daily and annual temperature fluctuations
decrease with the increase in depth below the
ground surface.
•At a depth of about 4 m below ground, the
temperature inside the earth remains nearly
constant round the year and is nearly equal to
the annual average temperature of the place.
•A tunnel in the form of a pipe or otherwise
embedded at a depth of about 4 m below the
ground will acquire the same temperature as
the surrounding earth at its surface.
•Therefore, the ambient air ventilated through
this tunnel will get cooled in summer and
warmed in winter and this air can be used for
cooling in summer and heating in winter.
EARTH AIR TUNNELS
•This technique has been used in the composite
climate of Gurgaon in RETREAT building.
•The living quarters (the south block of RETREAT) are
maintained at comfortable temperatures (approx. 20-
30 degree Celsius) round the year by the earth air
tunnel system, supplemented, when-ever required,
with a system of absorption chillers powered by
liquefied natural gas during monsoons and with an air
washer during dry summer.
•However, the cooler air underground needs to be
circulated in the living space. Each room in the south
block has a 'solar chimney; warm air rises and escapes
through the chimney, which creates an air current for
the cooler air from the underground tunnels to replace
the warm air.
•Two blowers installed in the tunnels speed up the
process.
•The same mechanism supplies warm air from the
tunnel during winter
•Evaporative cooling lowers indoor air temperature by evaporating water.
•It is effective in hot and dry climate where the atmospheric humidity is low.
•In evaporative cooling, the sensible heat of air is used to evaporate water,
thereby cooling the air, which, in turn, cools the living space of the building.
•Increase in contact between water and air increases the rate of evaporation.
•The presence of a water body such as a pond, lake, and sea near the building
or a fountain in a courtyard can provide a cooling effect.
EVAPORATIVE COOLING
•The most commonly used
system is a desert cooler, which
comprises water, evaporative
pads, a fan, and pump.
Evaporative cooling has been used for many centuries in
parts of the middle east, notably Iran and turkey.
•In this system, wind catchers guide outside air over water-
filled pots, inducing evaporation and causing a significant
drop in temperature before the air enters the interior.
•Such wind catchers become primary elements of the
architectural form also.
•Passive downdraught evaporative cooling is particularly
effective in hot and dry climates. It has been used to
effectively cool the Torrent Research Centre in Ahmedabad.
PASSIVE DOWN DRAUGHT COOLING
ROOF SPRAYS
D.CHENNA KESHAVA REDDY
19171AA016

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Passive methods of cooling

  • 2. • Passive cooling systems are least expensive means of cooling a home which maximizes the efficiency of the building envelope without any use of mechanical devices. •It rely on natural heat-sinks to remove heat from the building. They derive cooling directly from evaporation, convection, and radiation without using any intermediate electrical devices. •All passive cooling strategies rely on daily changes in temperature and relative humidity. •The applicability of each system depends on the climatic conditions. •These design strategies reduce heat gains to internal spaces. PASSIVE COOLING
  • 4.  Natural Ventilation  Shading  Wind Towers  Courtyard Effect  Earth Air Tunnels  Evaporative Cooling  Passive Down Draught Cooling  Roof Sprays METHODS OF COOLING
  • 5. • Outdoor breezes create air movement through the house interior by the 'push-pull' effect of positive air pressure on the windward side and negative pressure (suction) on the leeward side. •In order to have a good natural ventilation, openings must be placed at opposite pressure zones. •Also, designers often choose to enhance natural ventilation using tall spaces called stacks in buildings. NATURAL VENTILATION • With openings near the top of stacks, warm air can escape whereas cooler air enters the building from openings near the ground. • The windows, play a dominant role in inducing indoor ventilation due to wind forces.
  • 6. •In most homes, exhausting the warm air quickly can be a problem. •With the design of high ceilings throughout the breeze zone combined with clerestory windows at the 14′ ceiling height on three walls, the rising hot air is allowed to escape which in turn does two things. •Firstly the rising air creates a low pressure zone on the cool mass floor, pulling air along the floor from other areas of the house as well as any open doors. •Secondly the rising and escaping air creates an interior low pressure that should pull in large volumes or exterior air from the patio doors. •Depending on the primary wind direction and which doors are opened relative to time of day and shade, we can create a breeze of cooler incoming air.
  • 7. •The most effective method of cooling a building is to shade windows, walls and roof of building from direct solar radiation. •Heavily insulated walls and roofs need less shading. •Can use overhangs on outside facade of the building. SHADING •Solar control is a critical requirement for both cooling-load dominated and passively solar-heated buildings. Each project should be evaluated depending on its relative cooling needs: •Extend the overhang beyond the sides of the window to prevent solar gain from the side. •Use slatted or louvered shades to allow more daylight to enter, while shading windows from direct sunlight. •Reduce solar heat gain by recessing windows into the wall. SHADING
  • 8. •In a wind tower, the hot air enters the tower through the openings in the tower, gets cooled, and thus becomes heavier and sinks down. •The inlet and outlet of rooms induce cool air movement. •In the presence of wind, air is cooled more effectively and flows faster down the tower and into the living area. •After a whole day of air exchanges, the tower becomes warm in the evenings. •During the night, cooler ambient air comes in contact with the bottom of the tower through the rooms. WIND TOWER
  • 9. •The tower walls absorb heat during daytime and release it at night, warming the cool night air in the tower. • Warm air moves up, creating an upward draft, and draws cool night air through the doors and windows into the building. •The system works effectively in hot and dry climates where fluctuations are high .•A wind tower works well for individual units not for multi-storeyed apartments. •In dense urban areas, the wind tower has to be long enough to be able to catch enough air. • Also protection from driving rain is difficult.
  • 10. • Due to incident solar radiation in a courtyard, the air gets warmer and rises. • Cool air from the ground level flows through the louvered openings of rooms surrounding a courtyard, thus producing air flow. • At night, the warm roof surfaces get cooled by convection and radiation. •If this heat exchange reduces roof surface temperature to wet bulb temperature of air, condensation of atmospheric moisture occurs on the roof and the gain due to condensation limits further cooling. COURTYARD EFFECT
  • 11. • If the roof surfaces are sloped towards the internal courtyard, the cooled air sinks into the court and enters the living space through low-level openings, gets warmed up, and leaves the room through higher-level openings. • However, care should be taken that the courtyard does not receive intense solar radiation, which would lead to conduction and radiation heat gains into the building.
  • 12. •Daily and annual temperature fluctuations decrease with the increase in depth below the ground surface. •At a depth of about 4 m below ground, the temperature inside the earth remains nearly constant round the year and is nearly equal to the annual average temperature of the place. •A tunnel in the form of a pipe or otherwise embedded at a depth of about 4 m below the ground will acquire the same temperature as the surrounding earth at its surface. •Therefore, the ambient air ventilated through this tunnel will get cooled in summer and warmed in winter and this air can be used for cooling in summer and heating in winter. EARTH AIR TUNNELS
  • 13. •This technique has been used in the composite climate of Gurgaon in RETREAT building. •The living quarters (the south block of RETREAT) are maintained at comfortable temperatures (approx. 20- 30 degree Celsius) round the year by the earth air tunnel system, supplemented, when-ever required, with a system of absorption chillers powered by liquefied natural gas during monsoons and with an air washer during dry summer. •However, the cooler air underground needs to be circulated in the living space. Each room in the south block has a 'solar chimney; warm air rises and escapes through the chimney, which creates an air current for the cooler air from the underground tunnels to replace the warm air. •Two blowers installed in the tunnels speed up the process. •The same mechanism supplies warm air from the tunnel during winter
  • 14. •Evaporative cooling lowers indoor air temperature by evaporating water. •It is effective in hot and dry climate where the atmospheric humidity is low. •In evaporative cooling, the sensible heat of air is used to evaporate water, thereby cooling the air, which, in turn, cools the living space of the building. •Increase in contact between water and air increases the rate of evaporation. •The presence of a water body such as a pond, lake, and sea near the building or a fountain in a courtyard can provide a cooling effect. EVAPORATIVE COOLING •The most commonly used system is a desert cooler, which comprises water, evaporative pads, a fan, and pump.
  • 15. Evaporative cooling has been used for many centuries in parts of the middle east, notably Iran and turkey. •In this system, wind catchers guide outside air over water- filled pots, inducing evaporation and causing a significant drop in temperature before the air enters the interior. •Such wind catchers become primary elements of the architectural form also. •Passive downdraught evaporative cooling is particularly effective in hot and dry climates. It has been used to effectively cool the Torrent Research Centre in Ahmedabad. PASSIVE DOWN DRAUGHT COOLING