Impact of Thermal Mass for Future Energy Consumption: Case Study in Adobe House

Loading...

Date

Authors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Average
Influence
Average
Popularity
Average

relationships.isProjectOf

relationships.isJournalIssueOf

Abstract

This paper examines thermal mass quality of building envelope as passive preventive phenomena for future energy consumption. It questions how much and what type of thermal mass is required for decreasing energy consumption according to future climate change. Summer energy performance of adobe house in Konya, Turkey is studied in terms of thermal mass characteristic by using dynamic simulation software. Measured and predicted microclimate data for 2017 and 2050s are used to compare passive impact of wall material choices, i.e. adobe, limestone, vertical hollow brick and volume of wall without night-time ventilation. In conclusion, the study reveals that thermal mass with lower density and thinner materials show higher energy performance for summers. Energy consumption is minimum with vertical hollow brick wall in 50 cm for 2017 and 30 cm for 2050s. It is deduced that thermal conductivity will still have higher impact than thermal mass on energy consumption.

Description

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Q4

Scopus Q

Q4
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A

Source

International Journal of Global Warming

Volume

19

Issue

1-2

Start Page

220

End Page

232
PlumX Metrics
Citations

Scopus : 1

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 12

SCOPUS™ Citations

1

checked on Jun 15, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

1

checked on Jun 15, 2026

Page Views

954

checked on Jun 15, 2026

Downloads

258

checked on Jun 15, 2026

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
0.17362077

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available