Elementary Waste Insulation Panels in Hot Arid Regions
Majority of housing projects in hot arid regions have very poor insulation. Strategies against overheating in the summer and overcooling in the winter significantly increase the heat island effect due to poor building materials and low heat capacities. The research investi- gates whether locally available waste materials could be used to build reliable and replicable exterior retrofit insulation panels. The research focuses on the panels’ low thermal conductivity capabilities, cost-effectiveness, ease of construction, its buildability and acceptability by the locals and its capacity to fulfil a circular economy model. The methodology consists of a preliminary experiment where five chambers, including a control chamber, are built to test four types of insulation alongside a control room. The chambers are designed to resemble majority of buildings in hot arid regions and are tested for a week during the coldest and hottest periods of the year, five times a day. The results show that some materials are much more functional than others with the Styrofoam and Composite panels (cardboard along with Styrofoam) performing much better than polypropylene plastic and cardboard panels. The research suggests further develop- ment to these panels using a wider range of waste materials, or material subcategories, alongside incorpo- rating new techniques, which would simplify the manu- facturing process even further while keeping it cost-effective and would help direct the initiative toward practical realization. Furthermore, a deeper level of integration through larger groups of local laborers’ experience-based opinions would make the application of the retrofits onto the facades easier, while also providingagencytotheendusersandlocals.
History
School affiliated with
- Lincoln School of Architecture and the Built Environment (Research Outputs)
- College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Piselli, C., Altan, H., Balaban, O., Kremer, P. (eds) Innovating Strategies and Solutions for Urban Performance and Regeneration. Advances in Science, Technology & Innovation.Publisher
SpringerExternal DOI
ISBN
978-3-030-98186-0eISBN
978-3-030-98187-7Date Submitted
2022-01-01Date Accepted
2022-01-01Date of First Publication
2022-07-02Date of Final Publication
2022-07-02Open Access Status
- Not Open Access