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IAEEL newsletter 3-4/95
Windows As Luminaires Recent advances in technology have helped to make the window an ally in efforts to save lighting energy. Properly managed, the new window technologies can help minimize unwanted solar gains in summer as well as heat losses in winter, without squandering valuable daylight. It is useful to think of a window as a luminaire. Windows are sources of light and have distinct optical characteristics and implications for visual comfort. Of course, they are also sources of heat gains and losses. Although the field of daylighting is as old as architecture itself, recent advances in window technology have opened up new opportunities for reducing electrical lighting requirements in buildings. As is so often true, efforts to improve the energy efficiency of a technology-in this case windows - have led to a dramatic expansion of consumer choices. In addition to multiple glazings, efficient window options now include a host of shading systems, low-emissivity and selective coatings, gas fillings, and daylight integration (e.g. via dimming ballasts). Smart, switchable glazings are just around the corner. A host of non-energy-related benefits tend to accompany energy-efficient window systems. For instance, they generally have lower sound transmittance and reduce the amount of damaging ultraviolet light rays entering a building. Efficient windows also offer better thermal comfort: their interior surfaces are cooler in summer and warmer in winter. NEW TECHNOLOGIES Windows are arguably one of the most complex energy-using technologies in buildings. They play a role in lighting, heating, cooling, and ventilation. Aesthetics-appearance, view, and optical performance-are usually quite important to the occupant. Indeed, the serious lighting designer cannot ignore the energy implications of window choices. New technologies help to resolve the historic problem of the trade-off between windows that reflect unwanted solar gains in the summer and those that admit a maximum amount of useful light. These new technologies can, for instance, replace other, more primitive strategies for shielding a room from unwanted sunlight, such as tinted windows and curtains. Tinted windows have the disadvantage of absorbing solar radiation and can thereby become very warm (e.g. to 50° C). Some of this heat is then radiated to the interior space, causing discomfort to anyone standing by. Tinted windows also impede the building occupants' view of the outside environment and require higher artificial lighting energy use to compensate for the loss of daylight. Similarly, multiple-paned windows can be very effective at retaining valuable heat in the winter, but can filter out a considerable amount of useful daylight. In hot climates, spectrally selective glazings admit visible light wavelengths while reflecting unwanted infrared wavelengths. The larger the ratio of a window's visible transmittance to its shading coefficient (a measure of solar transmission) the greater is its selectivity. This "coolness factor" ranges from a ratio of 0.25 to 1.6 for windows sold today. In cold climates, low-e coatings are of interest. These nearly invisible, multilayer coatings are deposited on a window, either at the time of manufacture or as an off-line process. The coatings reduce radiative heat losses by reflecting heat back into the building. The bottom-line effect is an increase in the insulating value of the window. To further improve performance, gaps between the layers of multi-glazed windows (with or without low-e coatings) can be filled with gases-such as argon, krypton, or xenon-that have better insulating properties than air. Windows with low-e coatings have already captured a 35% market share in the U.S, with sales of 25 million square meters per year. Fig. 1 is based on a comparison of about 200 glazing products, including single-, double-, triple, and quadruple-pane glazings with different tints, coatings, gas fills, glass thicknesses, and gap widths. Visible transmittance varies from 0.15 to 1.0. Shading coefficients vary from 0.05 to 0.9.
In Fig. 2a the coolness factor is plotted as a function of the U-value, showing that, for example, in the U-value range of 2 to 3, the coolness factor ranges from 0.2 (low visible transmittance in relation to solar gain) to 1.4 (very well-managed solar heat gain and good visible transmittance). Remarkably, visible transmittances vary from roughly 0.2 to 0.9 over the entire range of insulating values (Fig. 2b).
"SMART"WINDOWS Since both thermal and luminous conditions are changing all the time, the ideal window should have properties that can be modified in response to these variations. Once a fantasy, such "switchable" windows are now becoming a reality in research laboratories and are moving toward the marketplace. With one of the most promising types of switchable glazings, electrochromics, the optical density can be controlled as a functional parameter such as a function of direct or total solar radiation, outside temperature, the previous-hour space-conditioning load, or the indoor daylight level. Changes in window properties are achieved by applying a very small electrical voltage across the electrochromic coating. (Fig. 3). If used in conjunction with electronic dimmable ballasts, electrochromic windows can help attain considerable lighting energy savings relative to static window shading systems.
Electrochromic coating
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