Do high energy-efficient buildings increase overheating risk in cold climates? Causes and mitigation measures required under recent and future climates
Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Contradictory findings are reported in the literature showing that high energy-efficient buildings have either
higher or lower overheating risks compared to old buildings. A methodology is developed using the Global and
Local Sensitivity Analysis to quantify the contribution and correlation of individual building envelope parameter
to the change in indoor operative temperature. This methodology is applied to an archetype Canadian detached
house as a case study to evaluate its overheating risk. The building envelope thermal characteristics studied
represent houses built in different periods from 1950 to high energy-efficient buildings in Montreal under
different weather generations: typical historical (1961–1990), recent observational (2016), and typical future
years 2030 (2026–2045) and 2090 (2080–2099) generated based on RCP-4.5 and 8.5 scenarios.
The results showed that the high energy-efficient buildings can be more resilient to climate change than old
buildings if adequate ventilation is provided, where the decrease of window and wall U-value, and SHGC all
contribute to the decrease in indoor temperature. While without adequate ventilation, the overheating risk in
high-energy-efficient buildings can be higher than old buildings, where decreasing wall and window U-values
and infiltration rate has a greater contribution to the increase of indoor temperature, while decreasing window
SHGC has a lower contribution to the decrease in indoor temperature compared to the case with adequate
ventilation. The results also showed that natural ventilation in the high energy-efficient buildings is sufficient to
reduce the overheating risk under the current climate but will require additional interior and exterior shading
under future climates.
Description
Keywords
Global variance-based sensitivity analysis
High energy-efficient building
Envelope thermal characteristics
Overheating risk
Climate change
Mitigation measures
Citation
Baba, F.M. et al. (2022) “Do high energy-efficient buildings increase overheating risk in cold climates? Causes and mitigation measures required under recent and future climates,” Building and Environment, 219.