Abstract

Radiant floor heating is becoming increasingly popular in cold climates because it delivers higher comfort levels more efficiently than conventional systems. Wood is one of the surface coverings most frequently used in radiant flooring, despite the widely held belief that in terms of thermal performance it is no match for higher conductivity materials if a high energy performance is intended. Given that the highest admissible thermal resistance for flooring finishes or coverings is generally accepted to be 0.15 m2K/W, wood would appear to be a scantly appropriate choice. Nonetheless, the evaluation of the thermal performance of wooden radiant floor heating systems in conjunction with the building in terms of energy demand, thermal comfort, and start-up period, has been insufficiently explored in research. This has led to the present knowledge gap around its potential to deliver lower energy consumption and higher thermal comfort than high-thermal-conductivity materials, depending on building characteristics. This article studies the thermal performance of wood radiant floors in terms of three parameters: energy demand, thermal comfort, and start-up lag time, analysing the effect of wood properties in conjunction with building construction on each. An experimentally validated radiant floor model was coupled to a simplified building thermal model to simulate the performance of 60 wood coverings and one reference granite covering in 216 urban dwellings differing in construction features. The average energy demand was observed to be lower in the wood than in the granite coverings in 25% of the dwellings simulated. Similarly, on average, wood lagged behind granite in thermal comfort by less than 1 h/day in 50% of the dwellings. The energy demand was minimised in a significant 18% and thermal comfort maximised in 14% of the simulations at the lowest thermal conductivity value. The vast majority of the wooden floors lengthened the start-up lag time relative to granite in only 30 min or less in all the dwellings. Wood flooring with the highest thermal resistance (even over the 0.15 m2K/W cited in standard EN 1264-2) did not significantly affect the energy demand or thermal comfort. On average, wood flooring lowered energy demand by 6.4% and daily hours of thermal comfort by a mere 1.6% relative to granite coverings. The findings showed that wood-finished flooring may deliver comparable or, in some cases, higher thermal performance than high-conductivity material coverings, even when their thermal resistance is over 0.15 m2K/W. The suggestion is that the aforementioned value, presently deemed the maximum admissible thermal resistance, may need to be revised.

Highlights

  • The underfloor heating system is one of the oldest technologies for providing heating in buildings

  • Wood is one of the surface coverings most frequently used in radiant flooring, despite the widely held belief that in terms of thermal performance it is no match for higher conductivity materials if a high energy performance is intended

  • This article studies the thermal performance of wood radiant floors in terms of three parameters: energy demand, thermal comfort, and start-up lag time, analysing the effect of wood properties in conjunction with building construction on each

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Summary

Introduction

The underfloor heating system is one of the oldest technologies for providing heating in buildings. Low-thermal-resistance natural stone and ceramic materials may initially be deemed to feature higher thermal performance than wood [30], which is used as a covering in radiant floors for subjective reasons: its aesthetics tend to be more highly esteemed and it is deemed more pleasing to the touch Another advantage, according to Zhao et al [31], is that with wood ‘the surface temperature is more moderate and uniform’. The evaluation of the thermal performance of wooden radiant floor heating systems in conjunction with the building in terms of energy demand, thermal comfort, and start-up period, has been insufficiently explored in research This has led to the present knowledge gap around its potential to deliver lower energy consumption and. ImnatlydpieffBu,ssioimn.ilIanr ttyopAe,Bth, seimpiiplaers taoreAla, itdheupnidpeersthareecloavideruinngd,ewr htheerectohveeyrirnegs,t wonhedrieffuthseoyr breasntdosn. dTiyffpuesoCr bpainpdes.aTryepeemCbpedipdeesdarieneamnbuendddeerdlaiynearncuronwdenreladywericthroawbnaenddwmithadaeboafnda dmifafdereeonftamdaitfeferriaeln. tWmhaitlerwiaol.oWdhisilexwpoliocidtliysleisxtpeldicaitslyonliestoefdtahseopnoessoifbtlheecpovoesrsinbglemcoavterianlgs fmoratteyrpiaelsBf,oitrstyupse wB,iitths tuhsee owthitehrtthhereoethteyrptehsreisentyopt erus liesdnoturtu. lTehdeoruatd. iTahnet rflaodoirainntgflcohoorsineng fcohrotsheins fsotur dthyiswsatsudstyanwdaasrdst-acnomdaprldia-cnotmfoprlitaynptefsoAr taynpdesCA, caonndfigCu,rcaotniofnigsuwraitdioelnysuwseiddeilny ruasdeidanint flraodoiraintgf.looring

Screed
Simulation Models
Detailed Radiant Floor Thermal Modelling
Coupling the Building and Radiant Floor Thermal Models
Simulation Results and Discussion
General Trends in Performance
Effect of Building Construction
14 Low Medium High
Effect of Wood Thermal Conductivity
Effect of Wood Thermal Resistance
Full Text
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