Journal of Daylighting (Jun 2024)

Performance of Shading Against West Glass Facades to Optimise Daylight, Thermal Comfort and Energy Efficiency of Office Buildings

  • Asaduzzaman Rubel,
  • Md Ashikur Rahman Joarder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15627/jd.2024.8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 131 – 148

Abstract

Read online

In tropical urban areas, the vertical facades of buildings often play a crucial role in capturing solar radiation and heat, especially for office buildings facing west during the afternoon. In Dhaka, a tropical city, the construction of major arterial roads connecting the northern and southern regions of the city has led to the emergence of numerous commercial buildings along these roads, predominantly facing in east or west directions. This research investigated the efficiency of different existing fenestration types (glass curtain walls, glass windows with horizontal and vertical louvres, overhangs, vertical fins, and egg crate shading) of west-facing office buildings in Dhaka in terms of daylight, thermal comfort and energy efficiency, and explore strategies to enhance existing performance. From the field survey, a 'case office building' was selected, and simulations were carried out with the six different fenestrations, as mentioned above, while keeping other aspects constant as found during the survey, e.g., floor plan, equipment and number of occupants. In this research, the simulation process encompasses daylighting simulation, energy simulation, and multi-objective optimisation. The study utilised a case model created with Rhinoceros and ClimateStudio, while performance metric optimisation was achieved using Grasshopper and Octopus. Multi-objective optimisation techniques were employed to improve the shading configurations. The TT toolbox facilitated data exportation and Design Explorer assisted in data visualisation. The window with egg crate shading was found to be the most effective fenestration type among the studied shading configurations. Further parametric simulation was conducted to develop an optimised egg crate shading design configuration. It was found that egg crate shading with a 1.0 m depth provided optimum daylight and solar heat gain inside the office building among the studied configurations in the context of Dhaka. A comparison was also made between the optimised egg crate option and a customised egg crate with some detailing (popularly known as brise soleil). Brise soleil showed better performance with 12.2% higher sDA and 98 lux additional average illuminance compared to the previous optimum one. The findings underscore the significance of employing optimisation methodology to devise shading configurations while also revealing substantial opportunities to enhance performance further by tailoring details on the optimised design recommended from simulation analysis.

Keywords