1. Introduction
Energy efficiency in buildings is a constant challenge for researchers, who must come up with new solutions to reduce energy consumption. New technologies proposed and developed for energy performance in buildings must take into account two criteria: low cost of production and environmentally-friendly manufacturing.
Energy performance in buildings became a priority in recent decades, and the use of passive systems represents a great alternative due to their capability to convert or to store heat received from solar radiation. The use of green walls is one of the passive methods for lowering energy use in buildings. Their effects have been researched in both warm and cold climates, including oceanic [
1], temperate [
2], and subtropical [
3]. These passive energy-saving solutions have also been categorized by Perez et al. [
4]. Louis et al. [
5] examined how green walls affect the thermal characteristics of the building envelope and how solar radiation absorption, reflection, and transmissivity are impacted.
Trombe walls are also used to make buildings more energy efficient. They have also been researched in a variety of climates, including the desert regions of Iran [
6], the cold regions of Turkey [
7], and the city of Athens, Greece [
8]. Various studies have examined the possibility of improving Trombe walls by analyzing the conditions of ventilation openings and occlusion device operation [
9], or by creating innovative designs [
10].
Buildings can also save energy by using walls that include phase-change materials. Researchers have looked into a number of ways to introduce PCM into the wall structure. In order to preserve similar comfort levels throughout the year, Faraji et al. [
11] quantitatively analyzed the feasibility of replacing the thick and heavy external walls utilized in Mediterranean nations with thin and light thermal mass walls. The findings demonstrate that internal temperature variations in the wall using PCM are significantly reduced. Omari et al. [
12] examined how the addition of micro-dispersed PCM-composite boards alters a wall’s thermal behavior throughout the year.
In addition, Meng et al. [
13] and Xie et al. [
14] examined the behavior of rooms with PCM-composite walls throughout the year. Chen et al. [
15] examined another usage of PCM walls by putting them in solar greenhouses. The suggested approach improved the wall’s ability to store and release heat, raising the average soil temperature, indoor air temperature, and daily effective accumulative temperature, on average.
The use of double-skin façades is another passive energy-saving technology. Studies like those by Dama et al. [
16] and Souza et al. [
17] use experimental and numerical analysis to examine how introducing a double-skin façade to a building influences heat gains inside the building. Zhang et al. [
18] attempted to improve the DFS by figuring out the ideal vertical air channel thickness. They discovered that the thickness should be less than 0.6 m for air ducts intended to boost ventilation and less than 0.2 m for those intended to increase warm air supply. Amorphous silicon photovoltaic blinds may be used to generate power on-site while also reducing heat absorption or loss through glazing, according to research by Luo et al. [
19]. To lessen the additional rise in cooling loads in buildings, Li et al. [
20] inserted a PCM into a double-skin façade.
Another solution for improving the performance of passive systems is to integrate heat pipes in the wall structure. A study by Zhang et al. [
21] proposed this type of passive solar energy utilization technology, where the heat transfer and energy-saving characteristics of the wall were analyzed theoretically and experimentally. In a similar manner, Tan et al. [
22] investigated the heat transfer and energy-saving capabilities of wall-implanted heat pipes during the heating season.
The heat transfer performance of the proposed systems was validated by conducting the average equivalent heat transfer coefficient experiment. Heat pipe evaporation section length and diameter were also optimized to calculate the energy-saving potential. They reported that the proposed system wall, implanted with heat pipes, has remarkable energy-saving potential. Liu et al. [
23] analyzed the possibility of improving the structure of heat pipes implanted in walls, for a better heat transfer performance.
Li et al. [
24] and Zhang et al. [
25] investigated the dynamic heat transfer performance of the wall implanted with heat pipes during heating season. According to their report, the suggested method can save 21.61% of energy, and the heat flow ratio to the inside of the wall is 4:1. In the same manner, the wall with heat pipes implanted was analyzed during the winter season by Sun et al. [
26].
The performance of a proposed heat pipe-assisted solar wall was investigated by Michael et al. [
27] through simulation and experiments. The heat pipe model was calculated using electrical resistances, and to simulate hourly performance, MatLab codes were used. The investigation of the heat pipe-assisted solar wall was continued by Brian et al. [
28] who, based on the numerical and experimental results, proposed a full-scale model to analyze the performance during the heating season. Continuing the research on the subject, Brian et al. [
29] proposed the use of the solar heat pipe system to reduce thermal gains in the cold season.
In this study, we evaluated a passive heating system that harnesses solar energy and converts it into thermal energy through the use of heat pipes inserted in walls. The novel aspect of this experiment is the utilization of concrete walls that have different recyclable materials added to their structure in various proportions.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of the Global System
The newly-designed passive system was built in four modules (
Figure 1). Module one consists of a solar radiation simulator built using six lamps that are arranged in two columns with 3 lamps in each column. The second module consists of a wood shell with a height of 0.8 m, a width of 0.6 m, and a thickness of 0.15 m, called the air gap. A layer of high-density polystyrene is applied inside the shell. The air gap has a glass layer in front and a black painted steel plate at the back. The glass layer is 0.05 m thick and was placed to allow the solar radiation to pass through and reach the absorber plate.
The third module consists of an insulated concrete wall equipped with heat pipes. The concrete block has a length of 0.6 m, a width of 0.4 m, and a thickness of 0.2 m. Four concrete samples were cast with standard aggregates and waste aggregates in the mixture: CW01—corresponds to the concrete control sample; CW02—corresponds to concrete with 10% fly ash replacement for cement and 20% chopped PET replacement for the sand mass; CW03—corresponds to concrete with 10% fly ash replacement for cement and 20% sawdust replacement for the sand mass; CW04—corresponds to concrete with 10% fly ash replacement for cement, 10% granular polystyrene with dimensions between 1 and 4 mm replacement for the sand mass and 20% granular polystyrene with dimensions between 4 and 8 mm replacement for the aggregate sort. The 4th module consists of the insulated room built from wood plates. This module is insulated using a polystyrene layer of 0.1 m at the exterior to prevent heat loss. The concrete blocks were built according to previous research [
30], which analyzed the density, compressive strength, and thermal conductivity of several concrete samples mixed with various percentages of fly ash, chopped PET, sawdust, and granular polystyrene.
2.2. Experimental Approach to the Global System
The designed model was subjected to experimental investigations in the laboratory. The air temperature inside the laboratory measured during the experimental investigations was 15 °C. The solar radiation simulator was used to replicate the heat flux emitted by solar radiation. The heat fluxes proposed for the experimental investigations of the heat pipe-equipped concrete walls are 100 W/m2, 150 W/m2, 200 W/m2, and 250 W/m2.
The discharge of the heat captured by the heat pipe was measured on the external surface of the wall inside module 4 and in the center of module 4. For both systems, constant heat flux was applied to the glass side of the solar collector for 10 h, which was considered the charging time. At the end of the charging cycle, the solar module was turned off and the discharging cycle began, continuing for the next 14 h. Temperature measurements were made with type K thermocouples and recorded by a data logger on a memory card. There were 8 sensors on the surface of the wall, and 3 sensors in the middle of module 4, placed at different heights. The data logger recorded the temperatures every 60 s during the charging and discharging cycle. The placement of the sensors are presented in
Figure 2.
2.3. Numerical Approach to the Global System
To choose an optimum design for the experimental stand, the global system was designed in 3D using Autodesk Inventor software and subjected to numerical simulations using Autodesk CFD software. The geometry of the global system presented in
Figure 3 was reproduced at a real scale for the modules built in the experimental model.
The geometry was imported in Autodesk CFD, suppressing the components with no use in the global system to reduce the computational time required to reach the convergence. The simulations ran based on the governing equations of fluid dynamics or Navier-Stokes equations: the continuity, momentum, and energy equation coupled to the energy conservation equation. The software resolved the conjugate heat transfer where conduction, convection, and radiation heat transfer are coupled with fluid flow.
A constant temperature of 15 °C was applied to the exterior air volume, which reproduced the initial conditions of laboratory indoor air. Adiabatic conditions were imposed for the insulated components, leading to a heat flux of φ = 0 W/ m2 applied on the polystyrene surfaces. Various boundary conditions of heat fluxes, from 100 to 250 W/m2, were applied on the absorber plate and heat pipe evaporator surfaces. Due to the software’s limitation with regard to simulating the heat pipe multiphase change when the evaporation-condensation process occurs, a new material with a very high and constant thermal conductivity was created and assigned to the heat pipe inner volume. From the software database, materials were assigned: glass for the glass; wood for the wood shell of the solar heat absorber and for the room; and copper for the heat pipes. The geometry was discretized in 300,000 elements using the mesh generator of the software. Based on automatic local curvature, the meshing of the solid and fluid zones was generated at a medium size while the contact between them was generated at a smaller size for better capture of the heat transfer. Assuming a laminar incompressible flow at hydrostatic pressure, the heat transfer mechanisms by radiation, convection, and conduction were proposed to be resolved during the simulation.
4. Discussion
All 4 concrete samples showed promising results. Sample CW02, a mixture of concrete, fly ash, and chopped PET, registered the highest temperature in the experiments at the end of the charging cycle, at 28.2 °C. The numerical simulations confirmed this temperature peak.
Compared to the control sample CW01, sample CW03 behaved very similarly during the charging cycle. For all of the heat fluxes studied in the experiments, the temperature difference between the time when the lamps were switched off and the time when the discharging cycle ended was marginally smaller in CW03. That means the concrete sample with fly ash and sawdust is better at storing heat than the control sample.
Temperature differences between the concrete sample CW04 with fly ash and granular polystyrene, and CW03, were from 0.2 to 0.6 °C. However, their behavior was different during the discharging phase. CW04 had the smallest heat storage capacity, with an average temperature change of 6 °C between hours 10 and 24. A more detailed view of the temperature drop during the discharging phase is presented in
Table 9. These numbers were calculated using the difference in average temperature between minute 600 and minute 1440 from the experiments.
The results recorded by the temperature sensors were confirmed by thermal imaging photos and also by numerical simulations. The temperatures resulting from the numerical simulations were slightly higher than those of the experiments, with values between 1 and 3 °C. This can be explained by the fact that the software does not take into account convective heat losses.
5. Conclusions
The main goal of the research was to convert solar energy from bright building façades in an efficient way, putting forth a conversion-accumulation-solar energy delivery system based on the construction of an inventive solar panel with heat pipes and a heat storage wall for creating passive buildings. This system converts the solar energy from the sunny façades into thermal energy, which is then transferred by the integrated heat pipes in a large element with high thermal inertia. The thermal energy is saved during the day, and is released at night by using insulated shutters to maintain a comfortable temperature in the room.
Four concrete samples were cast with standard aggregates and waste aggregates in the mixture: CW01—corresponds to the concrete control sample; CW02—corresponds to concrete with fly ash and chopped PET; CW03—corresponds to concrete with fly ash and sawdust; CW04—corresponds to concrete with fly ash and granular polystyrene. These were integrated into a solar recovery system. Each global system was subjected to four heat fluxes of 100 W/m2, 150 W/m2, 200 W/m2, and 250 W/m2. The results were recorded by temperature sensors, and were confirmed by thermal imaging photos and also by numerical simulations.
CW02 had the most efficient mixture, resulting in an increased efficiency of 3.3% higher on average at the end of the charging cycle than the efficiency of CW01, the control sample. CW03 was the most efficient during the discharging cycle, losing on average 5.0 compared with 5.5 °C, the average temperature drop of CW01.
The original idea of the passive, eco-friendly system used to increase the energy efficiency of buildings may be quickly and cheaply installed in modules. The system can be used in climate zones where moderate solar heat flux is present throughout the entire year since it can be applied to all buildings, old and new, meeting heat demand even with low heat fluxes applied. The heat pipe system, in addition to improving a building’s energy efficiency, has a major economic impact by lowering overall heating costs and a large environmental impact by lowering CO2 emissions. Also, recycling materials are included in the concrete mixture, which benefits the environment.
The final conclusion of this study is that the suggested global system is a practical and effective way to recover solar energy from sunny building façades in order to create passive structures, even in situations with low solar radiation intensities of 100 to 250 W/m2.