Effect of moisture buffering on surface temperature variation: Study of different indoor cladding materials

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Abstract

The building materials used indoors constantly interact with the environment in which the occupants live. Recent studies have shown that natural materials, such as wood, can improve human well-being. In addition, the building materials facing the indoor air are able to adsorb and desorb water vapour from their surface and exchange it with the surrounding air. This mass exchange comes along with heat exchange, modifying their surface temperature, and thus the indoor environment. Therefore, in this article, we are investigating whether moisture buffering has an impact on comfort. For this purpose, room-scale numerical simulations have been carried out with WUFI Plus, comparing two types of interior cladding materials: painted plasterboards and a raw spruce panelling. The results show a slightly lower surface temperature and air temperature during the summer period when using spruce. A higher hygroscopicity of the spruce than the gypsum can explain this difference in behaviour between the two studied materials. Thus, spruce exchanges more latent heat with the surrounding air. However, only this thermal difference cannot explain the difference in comfort perception between the gypsum and the wood.

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Legros, C., Piot, A., Woloszyn, M., & Pailha, M. (2020). Effect of moisture buffering on surface temperature variation: Study of different indoor cladding materials. In E3S Web of Conferences (Vol. 172). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202017206002

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