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Cool Roofs Cool Cities Cool Planet. Ronnen Levinson, Ph.D . Acting Leader, Heat Island Group Environmental Energy Technologies Division Lawrence Berkeley National Lab RMLevinson@LBL.gov; tel. 510-486-7494; http://CoolColors.LBL.gov.
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Cool Roofs Cool Cities Cool Planet Ronnen Levinson, Ph.D. Acting Leader, Heat Island Group Environmental Energy Technologies DivisionLawrence Berkeley National Lab RMLevinson@LBL.gov; tel. 510-486-7494; http://CoolColors.LBL.gov Presented to the China NDRC Delegation to Berkeley Lab22 April 2010
Bird’s eye view of urban land use • The surface of Sacramento, CAis about • 20% roofs • 30% vegetation • 40% pavement ~ 1 km2
What makes a surface cool? net emittedthermalradiationE σ (T4 - Tsky4) reflectedsunlightRsolI incidentsunlightI convection opaque surface at temperature T conduction • High solar reflectance (Rsol) lowers solar heat gain (0.3 - 2.5 µm) • High thermal emittance (E) enhances thermal radiative cooling (4 - 80 µm) high solar reflectance + high thermal emittance = low surface temperature
Sunlight — more than meets the eye AM1GH = (clear sky)air mass 1 global horizontal Solar reflectance Rsol = 6.6% ultraviolet reflectance Ruv+ 44.7% visible reflectance Rvis + 48.7% near-infrared reflectance Rnir
White, cool color, warm color white roof cool red roof gray roof
Types of cool roofs New Old flat, white pitched, cool & colored pitched, white
Cool colored roofing cool concrete tile R ≥0.40 CourtesyAmericanRooftileCoatings standard concrete tile (same color) +0.37 +0.26 +0.23 +0.15 +0.29 +0.29 solar reflectance gain = cool clay tile R ≥0.40 CourtesyMCA Clay Tile cool metal R ≥0.30 CourtesyBASF IndustrialCoatings cool fiberglass asphalt shingleR ≥0.25 CourtesyElk Corporation
Prototype shingles Solar reflectance >= 0.25 (for conventional shingles, SR ~ 0.05 – 0.25)
Prototype concrete tiles Solar reflectance >= 0.40 (for conventional concrete tiles, SR ~ 0.1 – 0.4)
Vegetation • Plants cool air by evaporating water • sensible heat → latent heat • most effective in arid climates • Plant matter remarkably solar reflective • R ≈ 0.3 for leaves • R ≈ 0.4 – 0.5 for wood • reflectance results from cellular structure • Trees can shade buildings • Green roofs • high thermal mass • moderate solar reflectance • evaporative cooling • rainwater control • extensive (shallow soil) or intensive (deep soil)
Cool pavement technology: cement concrete • Study by Portland Cement Association shows that cement concretes have solar reflectances of 0.30 – 0.65 • LEED compliant (SRI ≥ 29) Solar reflectances of 45 concrete mixes
Cool pavement technology: asphalt concrete (?) • Cool asphalt concrete still in its infancy • We seek to identify cool solutions for resurfacing asphalt concrete pavement
Potential benefits of white roofson commercial buildings DOE-2.1E building energy simulations Two roof types aged gray roof(solar reflectance=0.20) aged white roof(solar reflectance=0.55) Four building prototypes new office, old office new retail, old retail 235 U.S. cities Local energy prices Local emission factors Local building stock Local population density Results: local, state, national cooling energy saving heating energy penalty energy cost saving reductions in emissionof CO2, NOx, SO2, Hg
Annual energy cost saving ($/m2) R-19 roof R-13 wallsEER10 A/C
Annual CO2 emission reduction (kg/m2) R-19 roof R-13 wallsEER10 A/C (from energyconservation)
Potential white-roof benefits to U.S. Retrofitting 80% of U.S. air-conditioned commercial buildings (2.1B m2) would annually save $735M 6.2 Mt CO2 (=1.2M cars) 9.9 kt NOx (=0.6M cars) 26 kt SO2 126 kg Hg through energy conservation Product lifetime energy savings has present value of $11B New York Times, 30 July 2009
Global cooling • “Global cooling” offers further CO2 reductions • negative radiative forcing: high Rsol lowers T, reducing both convection and thermal radiation into the atmosphere • 80% of reflected sunlight escapes into space • 100 m2 (1000 ft2) of white roof retrofit offsets 10 t of CO2 emission (once) • retrofitting 80% of U.S. commercial buildings yields one-time offset of 200 Mt CO2 (= 4M cars x 10 years)
On the web Cool Colors Project CoolColors.LBL.gov Heat Island Group HeatIsland.LBL.gov Cool Communities Project CoolCommunities.LBL.gov Roof Savings Calculator RoofCalc.com Cool Roof Rating Council CoolRoofs.org Cool California CoolCalifornia.org EPA Heat Islands epa.gov/hiri Energy Star Cool Roofs EnergyStar.gov Thank You!