Radiation cooling of buildings at night

1979 
The cooling of small buildings at night by radiation loss to the sky has been investigated by monitoring the thermal performance of two huts: one roofed with galvanised steel decking painted white, which acts as a [`]black body' for wavelengths greater than 3 [mu]m; the other with aluminium decking to which aluminised [`]Tedlar' sheet had been glued, the [`]Tedlar' acting as a selective surface absorbing and radiating mainly in the 8-13 [mu]m band. The hut with the painted roof was cooled marginally better than that with the [`]Tedlar' covered roof. Useful cooling powers of 22 Wm-2 were achieved at a roof temperature of 5°C, ambient 10°C, and the gross cooling power probably exceeded 29 Wm-2. Calculations based on a simple simulation of the sky radiation yield an upper limit of 40 Wm-2 for the cooling power of the surfaces and suggest that an ideally selective surface operating under the best possible clear-sky conditions has little advantage over a black body radiator unless the temperature of the surfaces is significantly lower than the ambient air temperature.
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