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Performance evaluation of well-insulated versions of contemporary wall systems—a case study of London for a warmer climate

Performance evaluation of well-insulated versions of contemporary wall systems—a case study of London for a warmer climate
Performance evaluation of well-insulated versions of contemporary wall systems—a case study of London for a warmer climate
Climate change and its consequences are of a great concern and the likely increasing temperature would add more dilemmas for the choice of passive design options. The performance of building envelopes is one of the key determinants of energy use and thermal comfort. This research presents an evaluation of commonly used construction systems (lightweight and heavyweight) with different levels of thermal mass. The performance of different construction combinations is quantified on the basis of their impact on thermal comfort and energy consumption for current and future time slices in London, UK where climate change impact is expected to be extreme. A flat model is examined as a case study to model the performance of the construction systems with low, medium and high level of thermal mass. The dynamic thermal simulation software used was DesignBuilder, which employs EnergyPlus as its calculation engine. In essence, this study establishes a new approach for assessing the performance of well-insulated contemporary construction systems on the basis of overall annual thermal comfort hours and energy consumption. Results indicate limited advantage of heavyweight construction systems in a changing climate.
2075-5309
Sajjadian, Seyed Masoud
f08f9a9d-5aee-4844-b4f9-b8f8fb454b5d
Sajjadian, Seyed Masoud
f08f9a9d-5aee-4844-b4f9-b8f8fb454b5d

Sajjadian, Seyed Masoud (2017) Performance evaluation of well-insulated versions of contemporary wall systems—a case study of London for a warmer climate. Buildings, 7 (1). (doi:10.3390/buildings7010006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Climate change and its consequences are of a great concern and the likely increasing temperature would add more dilemmas for the choice of passive design options. The performance of building envelopes is one of the key determinants of energy use and thermal comfort. This research presents an evaluation of commonly used construction systems (lightweight and heavyweight) with different levels of thermal mass. The performance of different construction combinations is quantified on the basis of their impact on thermal comfort and energy consumption for current and future time slices in London, UK where climate change impact is expected to be extreme. A flat model is examined as a case study to model the performance of the construction systems with low, medium and high level of thermal mass. The dynamic thermal simulation software used was DesignBuilder, which employs EnergyPlus as its calculation engine. In essence, this study establishes a new approach for assessing the performance of well-insulated contemporary construction systems on the basis of overall annual thermal comfort hours and energy consumption. Results indicate limited advantage of heavyweight construction systems in a changing climate.

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Published date: 10 January 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511011
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511011
ISSN: 2075-5309
PURE UUID: 32d957a6-f838-48fd-a3ba-4dcf68e7cdde
ORCID for Seyed Masoud Sajjadian: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5610-0498

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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2026 17:03
Last modified: 02 May 2026 02:22

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Author: Seyed Masoud Sajjadian ORCID iD

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