Abstract

This paper presents coherent 5-year measured data that have been gathered for analyses of building energy consumption and thermal performance of exterior walls. The data is also very suitable for calculations and simulations of heating and cooling energy need of buildings. The data was collected from six identical test buildings, having exterior walls that are constructed of different building materials. The data include the following: indoor–outdoors temperatures; temperatures at various depths within the northern, southern, eastern, and western exterior wall facades; indoor–outdoors relative humidity, heating energy, wind speed and direction; air tightness, infiltration, and horizontal global solar radiation. A computer system (data logger) was used to monitor, check, calculate, integrate, and save the data acquired from approximately 520 sensors in each test building. Measurements were taken with a time interval of 20 s. The 20 s values were then integrated over a time interval of 30 min and the minimum, maximum, and mean values were subsequently stored to a computer database. Analyses of the results indicated that temperatures within the buildings’ exterior walls are constantly changing and, that occasionally the flow of conduction heat is reversed (i.e. outside–inside) due to solar radiation. For accurate results of temperature distribution and the actual heat losses through building envelopes, none steady-state calculations are essential. Depending on the intensity of solar radiation and the material characteristics of the walls, temperature gradient at the inner surfaces of exterior walls may become milder compared to that of the outer surfaces.

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