Green Home Designs-Passive Solar Homes

Green Home Designs-Passive Solar Homes

Green home designs with passive solar systems have little to no operating costs, often have low maintenance costs, and emit no greenhouse gases in operation. They do, however, need to be optimized by design to yield the best performance and economics.

Passive Solar Building Design

Green home plans utilizing a passive solar building design use a structure's windows, walls, and floors to collect, store, and distribute the sun's heat in the winter and reject solar heat in the summer. This green home design can also maximize the use of sunlight for interior illumination.

The technology is called passive solar design, or climatic design. Unlike active solar heating systems, it doesn't involve the use of mechanical and electrical devices — such as pumps, fans, or electrical controls — to circulate the solar heat. Buildings designed for passive solar incorporate large south-facing windows and construction materials that absorb and slowly release the sun's heat. The longest walls run from east to west. In most climates, passive solar designs also must block intense summer solar heat. They typically incorporate natural ventilation and roof overhangs to block the sun's strongest rays during that season.

"Day-lighting" takes advantage of natural sunlight, through well-placed windows and specialized floor plans, to brighten up a building's interior.

Passive solar design can be used in most parts of the world. If designed by an experienced passive solar architect, buildings using passive solar design principles don't have to cost more up front than conventionally designed buildings. And when they do, the savings in energy bills quickly pay for themselves.

How It Works

Every passive solar building includes five distinct design elements (see diagram 1):

1. An aperture or collector — the large glass area through which sunlight enters the building.

2. An absorber — the dark surface of the storage element that absorbs the solar heat.

3. A thermal mass — the material that stores the absorbed heat. This can be masonry materials such as concrete, stone, and brick; or a water tank.

4. A distribution method — the natural tendency of heat to move from warmer materials to cooler ones (through conduction, convection, and radiation) until there is no longer a temperature difference between the two. In some buildings, this strictly passive distribution method is augmented with fans, ducts, and blowers to circulate the heat.

5. A control mechanism — to regulate the amount of sunlight entering the aperture. This can be as simple as roof overhang designed to allow more sunlight to enter in the winter, less in the summer.


Diagram 1: Elements of passive solar design, shown in a direct gain application.

There are three basic passive solar designs for heat regulation, each of which incorporates these five elements in different ways.

Direct gain

This the simplest passive design technique. Sunlight enters a building through an opening — usually south-facing windows. It then strikes the building's thermal mass

— usually dark-colored masonry floors and/or walls in the interior space that absorb and store the solar heat. At night, as the building cools, heat stored in the floors and walls warms the rooms.

Trombe wall (indirect gain)

In this design, a dark-colored wall is placed between a building's south-facing windows and its living or working space. The wall absorbs solar heat through radiation, stores it, and then releases it into the building when the indoor temperature falls below that of the wall's surface.


Diagram 2: Passive solar design using a trombe wall.

Sunspace (isolated gain)

This design uses a separate solar room (solarium) to store solar heat. A sun-space can be built as part of a new building or as an addition to an existing one.

Photo courtesy of Four Seasons Sunrooms

Sunspaces also require a thermal mass to store heat. This stored heat is distributed throughout the building via ceiling and floor-level vents, windows, and doors, sometimes with the addition of fans.

Daylighting requires windows that are placed on or near a building's roof, such as skylights. High-level windows and skylights can allow sunlight to reach throughout a building — including north-facing rooms and upper levels. This typically requires an open floor plan — one that incorporates very few full walls. Effective use of daylighting reduces the need for electric light.

Advantages

Passive solar design is highly energy efficient, reducing a building's energy demands for lighting, winter heating, and summer cooling. Energy from the sun is free. Strictly passive designs capture it without additional investments in mechanical and electrical "active solar" devices such as pumps, fans and electrical controls.

Passive solar design also helps conserve valuable fossil fuel resources so that they can be directed toward other uses. And it saves money. Incorporating passive solar design elements into buildings and homes can reduce heating bills by as much as 50%. Daylighting, a component of many passive solar designs, is one of the most cost-effective means of reducing energy usage in buildings.

A well-designed and built passive solar building does not have to sacrifice aesthetics either. It can be as attractive as conventionally designed buildings and still save energy and money.

Passive solar design also reduces greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming because it relies on solar energy, a renewable, nonpolluting resource.

Disadvantages

There are few disadvantages to passive solar design and daylighting. With the help of experienced passive solar designer architects and builders, passive solar design costs little more than conventional building design and saves money over the long run.

But in areas where experienced solar architects and builders are not available, construction costs can run higher than for conventional homes, and mistakes can be made in the choice of building materials, especially window glass. Passive solar homes are often built using glass that, unfortunately, rejects solar energy. Such a mistake can be costly. Choosing glass for passive solar designs isn't easy. The right glass choice depends on which side of the building (east, west, north, or south) the glass is installed and the climate in which you are building.

In addition, room and furniture layouts need to be planned carefully to avoid glare on equipment such as computers and televisions.

And along with daylighting comes heat. During the summer or in consistently warm climates, daylighting could actually increase energy use in a building by adding to its air-conditioning load.

Applications

Passive solar design and daylighting principles can be applied to buildings in almost any part of the United States, with the exception of Alaska. In hot climates, the design mitigates the sun's heat; in cold climates the design takes advantage of it. However, passive solar heating tends to work best and be most economical in climates with clear skies during the winter heating season and where conventional heating sources are relatively expensive.

Passive solar buildings have been constructed as far north as Maine and as far south as Florida. In the United States, the design principles are most commonly used in residences because passive solar design works best in smaller buildings. But some passive solar design and daylighting applications also are used in commercial construction. For example, the Solar Energy Research Facility at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, a Department of Energy national laboratory located in Golden, Colorado, has incorporated a sunspace for passive solar heating into its building.

For More Information
Visit the following Web sites:

• National Renewable Energy Laboratory — for more in-depth information on passive solar design, including links to case studies and information tailored to homeowners, small business owners, and school teachers.

• Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Network— for a comprehensive list of links to Web sites dealing with passive solar heating, cooling, and daylighting.

Source: U.S. Department of Energy - Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy