Global Home
Média

Buildings as powerhouses

2015_creating-chemistry_solar-cell-windows_neu.jpg

Sustainable building is the buzzword among architects. Yet for most of us, living in houses built decades ago, reality remains far from the futuristic designs – our homes gobble up energy, are often wasteful and inefficient. But that may be about to change, as business and academia pull together to forge a new urban landscape, where buildings become the powerhouses of the future.

Ask leading scientists at the cutting edge of environmental technology to describe the house of the future and they will take you to a fascinating world, where material and biological science operate in harmony to create a living built environment.

It is a world where myriad technologies replace fossil fuels and nuclear power. A future where chemistry, biology, nanotechnology, material science and biomimicry fuse to create a living, interconnected city. A place where solar energy is harvested in different forms from every façade and stored inter-seasonally, where smart insulation regulates the environment, while living walls of algae react with sunlight to create shade and light. An interconnected world where the home, workplace, car and school mimic a living organism by interacting naturally with the environment to collect energy harvested from homes by day and workplaces by night to be pumped to where it is most needed.

Most of these recent innovations have been driven by the threat of climate change. Research by the United Nations Environment Programme reveals that smarter building construction offers the single greatest opportunity to deliver cost-effective cuts in harmful greenhouse gas emissions. Buildings globally consume 40% of our energy resources and emit a third of the planet’s greenhouse gases – a figure set to rise as power-hungry populations migrate to cities.

“We can make solar cells on anything, including paper.”

Dr. Trisha Andrew, Assistant Professor of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison

The problem with the scientists’ enticing vision of the future is that for most of us it bears little relation to our actual experience of the built world. Whether you live in Berlin, Shanghai, Rio or Milwaukee, you are likely to be surrounded by buildings that have changed little in design over the past 100 years and that use technology that has developed little over the past 50 years. The most advanced technology that we see in everyday use tends to be limited to heavy crystalline silicon solar panels and wind turbines.

This could be about to change. And the catalyst for change is a quiet revolution that has been taking place in the boardrooms of large companies and the laboratories of academic institutions. People are realizing that while there is no shortage of brilliant innovation in building design, there has not been enough focus on how to bring these new technologies to the wider market. This realization is leading some of the world’s best scientific minds to shift attention from blue-sky thinking to addressing the technological challenge of scale. The question is, how to make this technology both affordable and profitable while producing it on a large enough scale to really make a difference.

Greg Keeffe, Professor of Sustainable Architecture and head of research at Queens University in Belfast, Ireland, believes that architects and designers may have something to learn from the mass production techniques used by car manufacturers.

He argues that today’s need to cram houses into what little urban space is left, means each building has to be individually designed. This offers no opportunity to develop the kinds of innovation that go with mass production.

“If you look at the average house with an E-Class Mercedes parked outside, that house is so dim compared to that car,” says Professor Keeffe. “I believe we need a more industrialized, mass customized product, which is currently beyond our grasp because buildings are designed so differently from cars. Hundreds of man-years of thought have gone into designing each element of a car, whereas so much less thought has gone into each element of a building, because every building is so individual.”

40% of our energy resources…
Buildings globally consume 40% of our energy resources and emit a third of the planet’s greenhouse gases − a figure set to rise as powerhungry populations migrate to cities.

10 GW of power…
The scientists of the SPECIFIC project estimate that if just 10% of the steel produced each year by project partner Tata Steel had the smart coating of the transpired solar collector, it could produce 10 GW of power, or the equivalent of one nuclear power station’s annual energy output.

From lab experiment to industrial production

2015_creating-chemistry_Waelderhaus-Hamburg_neu.jpg
Sustainable building: wooden façades, solar cells on the roof and high performance insulation – the Wälderhaus in Hamburg (Photo: Stephan Falk).

Recently set up to address this very challenge, the Sustainable Product Engineering Centre for Innovative Functional Industrial Coatings (SPECIFIC) is an industrial and academic consortium tasked with bridging the knowledge gap that exists between innovation and production. Launched four years ago, the project is led by Swansea University in Wales with funding from the Welsh and UK governments, as well as from its main industrial partners Tata Steel, NSG-Pilkington Glass and BASF.

SPECIFIC’s aim is to turn buildings into the powerhouses of the future. It plans to act as a link between UK universities to exploit cutting edge, global developments in building materials and design, using smart coatings that enable walls and roofs to collect, store and release renewable energy. Working mostly with steel and glass, the project has already experienced extraordinary advances that are set to revolutionize at least one sector of the construction industry.

Kevin Bygate is Chief Executive Officer of the SPECIFIC project, heading up a team of more than 120 world-class scientists, technologists, engineers and business developers, all focusing on how best to up-scale existing technology and so turn laboratory-scale innovations into products capable of being manufactured on a large scale.

“There are many universities and research institutes that make the initial inventive step. What that physically means is, they have created something the size of a thumbnail, and on the thumbnail is a small dot, the size of a pin, that does something interesting,” says Bygate. “We take over at that stage to replicate the function with an abundant material using a process that can be scaled up. We use pilot lines to produce one-meter-wide sheets and then a reel-to-reel line that will make a material large enough to put on a building.”

One product is the transpired solar collector, which is capable of absorbing an average 50%, and up to 75% in good conditions, of the solar energy that hits a building. Transpired solar collectors are installed as an additional micro-perforated steel skin onto an existing or new wall or roof, creating a cavity of heated air between the building’s surface and the metal skin. The heated air is drawn from the cavity and fed into the building, so that it can either be used to meet the building’s immediate energy needs, or be stored for later.

Partner in the project, Tata Steel, produces steel in the UK for building warehouses, supermarkets and retail outlets. SPECIFIC estimates that if just 10% of the steel produced each year by Tata Steel had this smart coating, it could produce 10 GW of power, or the equivalent of one nuclear power station’s annual energy output.

Bygate believes that transpired solar collectors could become a key future energy resource. “What we have is proof of concept and now we are looking at the business model to take it to market,” he says. “Depending on the rate of public acceptance for the product and the adoption curves, you could generate around one third of the UK’s renewables by the 2020s using this type of technology.”

As important as harvesting solar energy is its storage. Batteries, hot water storage and underground thermal storage all have potential, but tend to take up large amounts of space. While some energy needs to be stored for a matter of hours before being used, other energy needs to be drawn on inter-seasonally, typically stored in summer for use in winter.

SPECIFIC is having success on this front too. Professor Dave Worsley, who heads the project’s academic research program, explains: “What we are working on is a thermochemical store – the basis of which is a salt that absorbes or releases water, similar to the way we sweat – which traps or releases a huge amount of energy.”

It is this ability to trap and release energy so efficiently that Worsley believes will make this solution suitable for inter-seasonal storage, while taking up ten times less space than using water for energy storage.

Solar paint

For years, scientists have been predicting the creation of an affordable photovoltaic paint that could be used on homes to harvest solar energy. But the reality is that it will still be many years before such a product reaches the market. But the work being carried out by Dr. Trisha Andrew, Assistant Professor of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has taken us one step closer.

Organic photovoltaic devices that can be incorporated into a dye have been around since the 1990s. Made from materials such as carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and sulfur, these devices have the merit of being inexpensive to produce, but suffer from inefficiency and a short life expectancy in comparison to silicon-based materials.

A couple of years ago, Andrew and her colleagues had a “eureka” moment. Why not make a virtue of this and produce a photovoltaic material, capable of powering electronic devices, but so cheap to manufacture that you just replace it when it degrades?

“For example, if you are creating CO2 emissions on your site, you can take those emissions and feed them into the façade.”

Associate Director Dr.-Ing. Jan Wurm, Arup’s head of Europe research and lead on the BIQ (Bio Intelligent Quotient) house

Details, Bioreaktorfassade, BIQ, Algenhaus, IBA, Internationale Bauausstellung, Wilhelmsburg, Hamburg, Deutschland
The living façade made of micro-algae is not only beautiful to look at, it also produces biomass and heat. The raw materials can be used directly in the house.

“The question we had never asked ourselves before was, how can you make these materials commercially,” explains Andrew. “It is a question that pharmaceutical companies ask every day. We were following the same process of chemical synthesis, so the logical step for us was to ask what is the effect on price per peak watt of your chemical synthesis?”

By focusing on the manufacturing process, Andrew discovered they were already sitting on a commercially viable product, capable of powering household devices with solar energy. At a production cost of less than 50 U.S. cents each, it would not matter that the photovoltaic cells had a life expectancy of between six months and two years.

“We now have a very promising set of advanced results on which we have built a start-up company. We can make solar cells on anything, including paper. That’s something you just can’t do with silicon,” says Andrew. “Scientifically and logically a paint is within our reach. If phase one goes well, a paint will be coming down the line, but it will probably be no earlier than a decade from now.”

Green-skinned buildings

Every now and then a new technology emerges that changes the way we think about buildings. Showcased at the Hamburg International Building Exhibition, the world’s first “bioadaptive façade” house has had such an impact. It opens up exciting new opportunities for architects and designers to break down barriers between the material and biological world and so takes us that bit closer to the vision of a living city.

Known as the BIQ (Bio Intelligent Quotient) house, it is the result of collaboration between a group of architects, engineering and design companies, including international consultants Arup.

Associate Director Dr.-Ing. Jan Wurm, Arup’s head of Europe research and lead on the BIQ house, describes the new technology as “bio-utilisation”. “We are creating micro-algae to generate heat and biomass, so it is a biological process just like a plant or a tree growing. It all follows on from the same photosynthesis, it’s just that we do it in a controlled environment,” explains Wurm.

The BIQ house features a façade, composed of bioreactor façades, that traps micro-algae in water between two plates of glass. Exposed to sunlight, the micro-algae double their mass every seven hours through photosynthesis. This green “skin” creates a natural shade to cool the inside of the building.

The algae also provide the house with two possible sources of energy. The first is the solar thermal heat captured by the water trapped between the glass plates. The sun’s rays heat the water and, as it contains green algae, it heats faster than clear water. The heat can be drawn out of the water as it passes through a pump room and then stored underground for future use. The second energy source comes from harvesting the algae themselves. To do this, oxygen is pumped through a central floatation device so that the algae can be skimmed off the surface. The algae can also be fed into the building’s biomass plant to create methane as a power source.

Gebaeude als Kraftwerk_Illu_Englisch_neu.jpg
The graphic shows where heat may be lost from a house through the building envelope.

“The system brings together different flows and cycles, such as water, carbon, heat and even food, if you want. So you can create an industrial symbiosis,” explains Wurm. “For example, if you are creating COemissions on your site, you can take those emissions and feed them into the façade.” It is this idea of the building being incorporated into the natural cycles of its environment, along with the opportunity to design with a living façade that changes throughout the day, that is exciting architects.

“What is interesting about it is the turbulence from the rising bubbles, but also the way that it changes color throughout the day and across seasons. You can use reflecting glass on the back so the bubbles create a glare effect, print interlayers, whatever you like,” he says.

There is clearly no single silver bullet solution to our energy problems. The powerhouse of the future will be a mixture of many technologies. The bioreactor façade is designed to work in harmony with other energy transformation techniques.

It is here that Wurm talks of the interconnected city, the city as an organism where different technologies exchange and provide usable energy in symbiotic networks. It is here that the living city starts to take shape, which is why bioreactor façades are generating so much interest.

Keeping heat in

But what about existing buildings? While transpired solar collectors and third generation photovoltaic could, in the future, be adapted for retrofitting, bioreactor façades are not the kind of thing that can be bolted to the front of your average home.

One cutting edge development that is being targeted at the domestic retrofit market is smart insulation. Increasing thermal efficiency without compromising aesthetics is the key goal. BASF has, for decades, developed insulation materials with different characteristics. Over the past seven years, it has been working on a new form of insulating material, called SlentiteTM, that contains pores on a nanoscale.

Now at the pilot production stage, it is a pure polyurethane aerogel that has all the necessary strength and provides high efficiency insulation, while being between 25 to 50% thinner than an equivalent insulation. Its unique quality is its ability to absorb and release water vapor, regulating moisture inside the building. “We see retrofit as well as new builds as its main application, both as an interior and exterior insulation,” explains Dr. Marc Fricke, who heads the team at BASF that created the new material.

2015_creating-chemistry_Al-Bahar-Towers_neu.jpg

Al Bahar Towers
In Abu Dhabi, where intense sunshine and heat are the norm, keeping buildings cool is the priority. The two most recent buildings to emerge on the city’s skyline, the Al Bahar Towers, have taken their inspiration from the mashrabiya, a lattice screen used in traditional Islamic architecture to provide shading. The towers are insulated and cooled by a dynamic intelligent façade. The outer screen of the building is programmed to respond to the sun’s movement to provide those inside with shade.
Onlookers have described the effect as like thousands of umbrellas opening and closing in response to the sun’s movements. By incorporating this shade technology, the architects, Aedas, have done away with the use of dark tinted glass, which has the disadvantage of restricting the amount of natural light that enters the building. The 25-storey twin towers require less air conditioning and artificial light than an equivalent office space, and so energy consumption is reduced by 50%.

Harvesting electricity from running water
Researchers at Seoul National University have developed a way of using the motion of water as a sustainable source of energy. The new technique uses a characteristic of dielectric materials – substances, like porcelain, glass and plastics, that are poor conductors of electricity but can help support an electrostatic field to generate power.
The South Korean scientists have found that if a dielectric material is placed into water, an electrical layer forms around the outside of the material. It is the variation between the water and the dielectric layer that generates the electric charges on an electrode. Working with Korea Electronics Technology Institute, the team has adapted a simple dielectric transducer to harvest the power. They found that the movement of a single 30 microlitre water droplet generated enough power to light a green LED. The discovery opens up the possibility of harvesting energy from flushing toilets and rainwater running off buildings.

The Passive House in China

Powerhouses-1.jpg
The Bruck project: an airtight, highly insulated shell that can reduce heat loss to the point where year-round comfort is achieved without a heating system.

Insulation has been a driving force for one of the most significant recent developments in sustainable housing – the Passive House. A German concept, the Passive House provides an airtight, highly insulated shell that can reduce heat loss to the point where year-round comfort is achieved without a heating system.

It is a concept that has caught the attention of the Landsea Group, one of China’s largest real estate companies, which opened the country’s first Passive House, the Bruck project, in April this year.

Built in Changxing County, Zhejiang Province in Southern China, an area known for its cold winters, extremely warm summers and high humidity, the Bruck project is a hotel for delegates visiting a nearby research centre which showcases the Passive House concept. Landsea believes that if it can demonstrate that the Passive House works in Changxing’s difficult climate, then it could be adopted in other parts of China. “These technologies could be widely applied in China, but we need to select the most suitable design and technologies according to local conditions in each different climate zone,” explains Kai Zou, Civil and Sustainability Engineer at Landsea.

With the Chinese government placing more emphasis on the need for sustainable housing, China’s construction industry is becoming more receptive to new ideas about reducing energy consumption. Landsea believes that now is the right time to champion the idea of the Passive House in one of the biggest housing markets in the world.

Algae façades, photovoltaic paints, smart walls and roofs, living buildings that do away with conventional energy sources – all this may still sound futuristic. But if the new breed of entrepreneurs and academics are successful, these cutting edge technologies will be appearing in buildings where we live sooner than we think.