Thermal performance of reflective materials applied ot exterior building components—A review

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Publication Date

May 15, 2014

Open Access

No

Abstract / Description

Reflective materials applied to opaque building components are becoming increasingly important because of their benefits in terms of thermal comfort and energy savings. Because of their optical properties, reflective materials stay cooler than standard materials under the same conditions; therefore, they are also known as cool materials. This paper presents a review on the state of the art of the application of reflective materials on buildings’ walls and roof. The thermal performance of these materials has been analyzed using different methodologies. Thus, the reported studies can be classified into seven categories: roof as a component, test cells, computational fluid dynamics, building simulation, monitored buildings, calibrated simulation, and mesoscale modeling. The paper describes the results obtained by means of these methodologies, the main characteristics of the models and, when available, the optical properties of the standard and cool materials.

Authors

  • I. Hernández-Pérez (Centro Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico, CENIDET-DGEST-SEP)
  • G. Alvarez (Centro Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico, CENIDET-DGEST-SEP)
  • J. Xaman (Centro Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Tecnológico, CENIDET-DGEST-SEP)

Additional Credits

Zavala-Guillén, I.
Arce, J.
Sima, E.

Publisher

Energy and Buildings

Suggested Citation

I. Hernández-Pérez, G. Álvarez, J. Xamán, I. Zavala-Guillén, J. Arce, E. Simá, Thermal performance of reflective materials applied to exterior building components—A review, Energy and Buildings, Volume 80, 2014, Pages 81-105, ISSN 0378-7788, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enbuild.2014.05.008.