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Holographic optical elements: various principles for solar control of conservatories and sunrooms

Holographic optical elements: various principles for solar control of conservatories and sunrooms
Holographic optical elements: various principles for solar control of conservatories and sunrooms
Holographic optical elements (HOE) can be used to reflect the direct (beam) sunlight incident on a window whilst allowing the diffuse light to pass through. This is achieved with a semi-transparent hologram, which enables solar control of a building without reducing the benefit of a window or facade to the occupants.
Domestic conservatories represent an interesting potential market for such a product. Conservatories and sunrooms by their very nature have large expanses of glass and so are prone to periods of unacceptably high solar gain during the summer months. Currently, blinds or other opaque shading devices are used to reduce the solar gain but this is at the expense of daylighting. This paper describes the potential application of solar control HOE applied as either a fixed plate or tracked solution.
The performance of such systems for the UK climate is predicted using transient thermal analysis simulation of commonly used UK conservatories. The benefit of selective HOE glazing of specific elevations within a conservatory is considered to achieve 'peak clipping' of daytime temperatures to an acceptable level. The simulations predict that reductions of up to 17 degrees are possible with fully tracked HOE applied to all the elevations of a typical conservatory design. Selective use of fixed plate HOE glazing, can achieve a temperature reduction of 6.1 degrees when only 62% of the glazing within a conservatory is replaced.
hologram, simulation, conservatory, sunroom
0038-092X
441-454
James, P.A.B.
da0be14a-aa63-46a7-8646-a37f9a02a71b
Bahaj, A.S.
a64074cc-2b6e-43df-adac-a8437e7f1b37
James, P.A.B.
da0be14a-aa63-46a7-8646-a37f9a02a71b
Bahaj, A.S.
a64074cc-2b6e-43df-adac-a8437e7f1b37

James, P.A.B. and Bahaj, A.S. (2005) Holographic optical elements: various principles for solar control of conservatories and sunrooms. Solar Energy, 78 (3), 441-454. (doi:10.1016/j.solener.2004.05.022).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Holographic optical elements (HOE) can be used to reflect the direct (beam) sunlight incident on a window whilst allowing the diffuse light to pass through. This is achieved with a semi-transparent hologram, which enables solar control of a building without reducing the benefit of a window or facade to the occupants.
Domestic conservatories represent an interesting potential market for such a product. Conservatories and sunrooms by their very nature have large expanses of glass and so are prone to periods of unacceptably high solar gain during the summer months. Currently, blinds or other opaque shading devices are used to reduce the solar gain but this is at the expense of daylighting. This paper describes the potential application of solar control HOE applied as either a fixed plate or tracked solution.
The performance of such systems for the UK climate is predicted using transient thermal analysis simulation of commonly used UK conservatories. The benefit of selective HOE glazing of specific elevations within a conservatory is considered to achieve 'peak clipping' of daytime temperatures to an acceptable level. The simulations predict that reductions of up to 17 degrees are possible with fully tracked HOE applied to all the elevations of a typical conservatory design. Selective use of fixed plate HOE glazing, can achieve a temperature reduction of 6.1 degrees when only 62% of the glazing within a conservatory is replaced.

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More information

Published date: 2005
Keywords: hologram, simulation, conservatory, sunroom

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 39419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/39419
ISSN: 0038-092X
PURE UUID: 59a22779-22fc-429c-8df0-aa4b0074cc0e
ORCID for P.A.B. James: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2694-7054
ORCID for A.S. Bahaj: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0043-6045

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Jun 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:45

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