http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10546-016-0160-y

Research Article
Boundary-Layer Meteorology
pp 1-19

Citywide Impacts of Cool Roof and Rooftop Solar Photovoltaic Deployment on
Near-Surface Air Temperature and Cooling Energy Demand

F. Salamanca, M. Georgescu, A. Mahalov, M. Moustaoui, A. Martilli
DOI: 10.1007/s10546-016-0160-y

Abstract

Assessment of mitigation strategies that combat global warming, urban heat
islands (UHIs), and urban energy demand can be crucial for urban planners
and energy providers, especially for hot, semi-arid urban environments
where summertime cooling demands are excessive. Within this context,
summertime regional impacts of cool roof and rooftop solar photovoltaic
deployment on near-surface air temperature and cooling energy demand are
examined for the two major USA cities of Arizona: Phoenix and Tucson. A
detailed physics-based parametrization of solar photovoltaic panels is
developed and implemented in a multilayer building energy model that is
fully coupled to the Weather Research and Forecasting mesoscale numerical
model. We conduct a suite of sensitivity experiments (with different
coverage rates of cool roof and rooftop solar photovoltaic deployment) for
a 10-day clear-sky extreme heat period over the Phoenix and Tucson
metropolitan areas at high spatial resolution (1-km horizontal grid
spacing). Results show that deployment of cool roofs and rooftop solar
photovoltaic panels reduce near-surface air temperature across the diurnal
cycle and decrease daily citywide cooling energy demand. During the day,
cool roofs are more effective at cooling than rooftop solar photovoltaic
systems, but during the night, solar panels are more efficient at reducing
the UHI effect. For the maximum coverage rate deployment, cool roofs
reduced daily citywide cooling energy demand by 13–14 %, while rooftop
solar photovoltaic panels by 8–11 % (without considering the additional
savings derived from their electricity production). The results presented
here demonstrate that deployment of both roofing technologies have multiple
benefits for the urban environment, while solar photovoltaic panels add
additional value because they reduce the dependence on fossil fuel
consumption for electricity generation.

Keywords
Cooling energy demand Cool roofs
Rooftop solar photovoltaic panels
Urban climate modelling

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