Abstract
Abstract
Albedo is an important indicator of radiation reflectance of pavement surfaces for the building envelope and on the ground level, and their resultant impacts on human comfort and the urban environment in outdoor spaces. Usually, albedo is generally accepted only for horizontal surfaces. This study developed an experimental test set-up for the albedo measurement system with pyranometers and automatic meteorological data acquisition system, which used it to conduct field measurements of albedo on horizontal and vertical surfaces of the used concrete block. The results show that albedo measured on a horizontal surface is not proportional to irradiance on a vertical surface. The albedo value between the two surfaces depend upon time of day, and the horizontal surface also received significantly more incident solar radiation than the vertical surface during all but the central hours of the day, while at reflected solar radiation on vertical irradiances were less than the horizontal. These results can help reduce the uncertainty in understanding and evaluating the thermal behaviour of the building and environmental impacts of pavement surfaces with different albedos in the outdoor urban space.
Reference18 articles.
1. World map of the Köppen-Geiger climate classification updated;Kottek;Meteorologische Zeitschrift,2006
2. The energetic basis of the urban heat island;Oke;QJRMS,1982
3. Assessing the Impact of urbanization on urban thermal environment: a case study of Bangkok metropolitan;Srivanit;Int. J. Appl. Sci. Technol.,2012
4. Passive cooling of outdoor urban spaces. The role of materials;Doulos;Sol. Energy,2004