Abstract:
Concrete sandwich panels are widely used building elements.
They are made by two reinforced concrete wythes separated by
a layer of lightweight material: the central layer is inhomogeneous
due to the presence of concrete ribs which tie the external
wythes and act as thermal bridges. International Standards
allow to evaluate the average thermal transmittance of concrete
sandwich panels as a linear combination of the transmittance of
the solid concrete ribs and of the lightened parts - calculated as
if the temperature field were 1D - and linear and point thermal
transmittances associated with thermal bridges. In a recent work
we have addressed the problem of finding an accurate correlation
for prediction of linear thermal transmittance values. The
goal was reached upon use of a fast and accurate Spectral Element
Method. In this work we complete our study investigating
the point thermal bridges and determining the associated point
thermal transmittance. Point thermal transmittances in sandwich
panels are associated with the concrete rib intersections, like in
the four panel corners, and require 3D numerical simulations for
their evaluation: the computational effort required to approximate
the point transmittance is much larger than that needed to
estimate the linear one. For this reason we present and discuss
a solution strategy based on the use of low-order polynomials
(p = 4) on three grids of increasing refinement, starting from a
very coarse one: results have been improved through an iterated
application of Richardson extrapolation. This procedure assures
a good trade-off between accuracy, as required by Standards, and
computational cost. A dataset of 1080 point transmittance values
is obtained varying systematically six geometrical and thermophysical
parameters. A simple power law correlation in terms of
a single variable depending on linear transmittance of the intersecting
ribs is introduced and its accuracy assessed.
Description:
Papers presented to the 12th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, Costa de Sol, Spain on 11-13 July 2016.