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The effectiveness of infiltration against roof insulation aimed at low income housing retrofits for different climate zones in Jordan

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posted on 2025-05-10, 17:04 authored by Aiman Albatayneh, Mohammad N. Assaf, Mustafa Jaradat, Dariusz AltermanDariusz Alterman
Building energy demand for heating and cooling has a complicated relationship with different environmental conditions surrounding the building sector. Many projects aiming to improve thermal performance in existing buildings in Jordan suggest that roof insulation will improve thermal performance. In this study we try to prove that minimizing building infiltration is more effective and provides a lower cost solution in low-income houses in Jordan. This work introduces a comparative analysis of the infiltration rate and insulation techniques applied to standalone low-income houses in Jordan to identify the energy efficiency of those techniques for different climate zones in the country. A building simulation presenting the common building configuration used in was developed to test the effectiveness of various insulation scenarios (Roof, Wall, Roof and wall together) and infiltration rate scenarios. The results show that in different climates the reduction of infiltration to half (0.75 air changes per hour (ACH)) shows a similar potential to reduce energy demand as 10 or 12.5 cm roof or wall insulation. Also, the reduction of infiltration rate to a low level (0.25 ACH) can decrease energy demand more effectively than 12.5 cm insulation in the roof or walls.

History

Journal title

Environmental and Climate Technologies

Volume

24

Issue

3

Pagination

11-22

Publisher

Sciendo

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

School of Engineering

Rights statement

©2020 Aiman Albatayneh, Mohammad N. Assaf, Mustafa Jaradat, Dariusz Alterman. This is an open access article licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), in the manner agreed with Sciendo.

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