Abstract
In recent years, there have been numerous studies on the application of retroreflective (RR) materials to exterior building walls to relieve the urban heat island (UHI) phenomenon and save building energy consumption instead of diffuse highly reflective (DHR) materials. Experimental measurements were undertaken to investigate the impact of applying DHR and RR materials to building exterior walls on the outdoor thermal environment. DHR and RR walls were tested with three canyon aspect ratios (H/ D) of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5, respectively, with seven environmental indexes recorded and compared, including air temperature (Ta), relative humidity (RH), sol-air temperature (SAT), operative temperature (OT), standard effective temperature (SET*), change in operative temperature (COT), and real-time solar reflectance (ρ). The results show that the RR wall is more effective in improving the outdoor thermal environment, where SAT decreased by 4.5 °C, SET* decreased by 0.5 °C, and COT decreased by 1.2 °C, on average, while it can also improve the real-time solar reflectance (ρ) by 12% on average compared to the DHR wall. Moreover, it gets more effective in scenarios with a higher canyon aspect ratio.
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