Novel technologies to enhance energy performance and indoor environmental quality of buildings / edited by Alessandro Cannavale, Francesco Martellotta and Francesco Fiorito
Material type:
- 9783036523392
- TD 195.E49 .N68 2021

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Main General Circulation | Mechanical Engineering | GC TD 195.E49 .N68 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000019392 |
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GC TA 405 .S73 2021 Statics and mechanics of materials / | GC TA 405 .U63 2011 c.2 Strength of materials / | GC TA 654 .G47 2015 Mechanical vibrations : theory and application to structural dynamics / | GC TD 195.E49 .N68 2021 Novel technologies to enhance energy performance and indoor environmental quality of buildings / | GC TD 346 . W38 [2021] Water and wastewater engineering : design principles and practice. | GC TH 6010 .S74 1992 Mechanical and electrical equipment for buildings / | GC TH 7015 .M55 2018 HVAC licensing study guide : problems,calculations, and tips to help you ace the HVAC exams / |
Includes bibliographical references.
This Special Issue aims at reporting current investigations on emerging materials and devices taking up the challenge of pursuing a significant improvement in the energy performance of buildings and indoor comfort. What is the contribution of innovative technologies in the epochal transition to low environmental impact buildings? This is the question addressed in this Special Issue, in order to offer a wide and heterogeneous amount of data to readers, along with results of high scientific impact concerning the application of innovative technologies in construction. The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change following the COP 21 Conference on Climate Change, organized by United Nations, required the States to reduce carbon emissions in the building stock. In the European Union, almost 50% of final energy consumption is used for heating and cooling; out of this huge amount, 80% is used in buildings. It makes sense, then, that the Union's goals are inherently linked to the real effort to renovate the building stock. To do this, in the EU and worldwide, the priority is to enhance energy efficiency, by deploying low-cost renewable energies and innovative technologies, especially those derived from recent achievements in the field of nanomaterials research, with special reference to building integration of novel technologies, spanning from chromogenics to semitransparent photovoltaics, super-insulating materials, and phase change materials. Articles here proposed deal with every construction or plant component of the building organism, taking advantage of novel technologies to improve their performance, from the envelope to structures, HVAC, and other technical systems, as well as indoor climate analyses in buildings and indoor environmental quality (IEQ), as well as visual comfort indoors
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