Adding extra mass to buildings
As many of you know, I have been sceptical that adding extra mass to a building will stabilise the temperature. This basically comes from when I studied this back in 2008.
Just to reconfirm my suspicions that regardless of construction type, the air in a building will react more to external inputs than internal inputs i.e. solar gain, ventilation and a heating system versus thick stone, brick or concrete walls.
To retest this idea, I worked out the amount of energy that is needed to change the air in one of my rooms, then calculated how much water is needed to match it.
Then I started measuring temperatures over the last few days.
Now I can bore you all with very detailed statistics, but it boils down to what I showed 16 years ago, it basically makes no difference.
The headline figures are that the mean air temperature was 16.7°C with a range of 6.2°C for the air in the room, 6 litres of water, which needs the exact same amount of energy to change by 1°C had a mean temperature of 16°C and a range of 25°C and double that amount, 12 litres, had a mean temperature of 16.3°C and a range of 2.9°C.
The bigger range, which some will interpreted as instability is caused by natural air changes and heating input (I have storage heating, so does not modulate like a properly set up combustion or heat pump system).
When looking at the more stable stable times between 10 AM and 3 PM (when I am usually out) the mean temperatures are, for the room 17°C (range 0.1°C), 6 litres 16.1°C (range 0°C), 12 litres of water 16.4°C (range 0°C). So allowing for instrument accuracy, about the same range, but the masses are actually cooling the air.
When I looked at the rate if change in an hour, all three were the same at -0.1°C/hour when cooling, and when warming, the air reacted faster at 0.3°C/hour but only over the time the energy is being inputted (two hours in my case). The water masses are equal at 0.1°C/hour. So the air responded a bit faster overall, but not much over 24 hours.
All the above confirms what I researched 16 years, adding mass to a building will make the mean temperature lower.
If you want to stop overheating, change the window design, no need to fill the walls with concrete, brick or block. That is barking up the wrong tree.
23 Comments
Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now