Faculty Publications
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Item Thermal and cost analysis of various air filled double glazed reflective windows for energy efficient buildings(Elsevier Ltd, 2020) Gorantla, G.; Saboor, S.; Vali, S.S.; Mahapatra, D.; Talanki Puttaranga Setty, A.B.; Kim, K.-H.The enormous amount of energy is being consumed by buildings in an attempt to deliver thermal comfort in buildings. This paper aims at reducing/increasing the total solar heat gain through various combinations of double glazed reflective windows of buildings. The spectral characteristics of six reflective glasses namely bronze, green, grey, opal blue, sapphire blue and gold-reflective glasses at a normal angle of incidence by using UV-3600 Shimadzu spectrophotometer according to ASTM E 424 standards were experimentally measured. The solar optical properties of the glasses were deduced by developing a MATLAB code using spectral data which was obtained from experiments in the solar spectrum wavelength range of 300 nm–2500 nm. Thirty air-filled double-glazed reflective windows have been studied for both thermal and cost analysis in the Indian composite climatic zone (New Delhi 28.580 N, 77.200 E). The configuration C13 (Grey reflective glass-Air gap 10 mm-Gold reflective glass) is observed to be the best air-filled double glazed window from the highest annual cost savings ($ 79.29 per annum in SE direction) and lower payback period (1.42 years) point of views among thirty double-glazed reflective glasses studied. The results of this paper are useful in the design of sustainable passive solar buildings. © 2019 Elsevier LtdItem Sustainable reflective triple glazing design strategies: Spectral characteristics, air-conditioning cost savings, daylight factors, and payback periods(Elsevier Ltd, 2021) Gorantla, K.; Saboor, S.; Kontoleon, K.J.; Mazzeo, D.; Maduru, V.R.; Vali, S.V.Buildings with conventional glazing systems are responsible for excessive cooling and heating costs. Sustainable use of energy in building environments requires the use of high-performing opaque and windowed walls. Triple glazing units attenuate solar heat gain/loss compared to single- and double-glazing assemblies, thus reducing air-conditioning costs and greenhouse gas emissions. The optical, energy, economic and environmental performances of a glazing unit are strictly correlated with each other. An improvement of optical properties leads to higher glazing energy performance, cost savings, and greenhouse gas emission mitigations. This work aims to suggest and define an energy-efficient triple glazing unit for lowering cooling and heating costs in buildings while experimentally testing the spectral performance of reflective glasses and assessing heat gains/losses. In this regard, bronze, green, grey, sapphire blue, and gold reflective glasses were considered and settled in sixty different triple glazing combinations. Spectral characteristics of reflective glasses were measured experimentally using a spectrophotometer over the entire solar spectral range (300–2500 nm). For the aims of this investigation, a numerical model was developed to assess the net annual cost saving ($/m2) and the payback period of the examined glazing units for the eight cardinal directions (N, N-E, E, S-E, S, S–W, W and N–W). The results confirmed that the TWG35 window glass unit in the S-E orientation was the most energy-efficient glazing in terms of alleviating this critical challenge (air-conditioning cost-saving 16.72 $/m2 among all other studied window glass units), while a payback period of 2.2 years was revealed. On the other hand, the TWG33 window glass unit has led to the optimal-lowest payback period (2.1 years), with a net annual cost saving of 16.55 $/m2. The findings of this paper demonstrate the significance of triple-glazing design approaches from an economic and environmental point of view. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
