Ultra-white ceramic cools buildings with record-high 99.6% reflectivity::undefined

  • @RGB3x3
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    1067 months ago

    You know what also cools houses down super efficiently?

    Trees

        • @maniii
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          87 months ago

          I can guarantee that a Rooftop Terrace garden cuts down almost 40% to 60% heat ever reaching the ceiling. If you have enough cover with smaller plants under larger bushes/shrubs/small trees then there will be a cool breeze around the terrace, provide nesting places for small birds and animals, a pocket of nature in an otherwise concrete heat jungle.

          The problem is who can afford to maintain the Terrace garden is the bigger challenge. Constantly checking soil, composting, watering, maintenance and just time+expense is usually beyond a lot of folks.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              Going back to flat roofs and adding plants and soil to the mix sounds like a recipe for some major water leakage issues.

              Would be cool to have rooftop gardens though

          • @Th3D3k0y
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            37 months ago

            Green roof, looks cool, usable space, and helps with cooling. Just damned expensive.

      • @0ddysseus
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        67 months ago

        Trees? Not many. Grasses, herbs, wildflowers, and shrubs? Tons of them. And you can pretty easily retrofit over an existing sloped roof. And the weight is no more than a tiled roof.

          • @0ddysseus
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            77 months ago

            Not if you use a waterproof base layer. This isn’t some theoretical thing, its tried and tested technology in common use

            • @[email protected]
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              07 months ago

              Well of course you’d use waterproof base layer, typically you’d use several even without the plants. It’s tried and tested with multiple cases of failing with age. That’s the issue. Even just flat roofs have been a failure point even without the plants but soil and plants are a definite concern for builders when talking long term.

              • @0ddysseus
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                17 months ago

                Are you a builder? Do you have any experience installing and maintaining green roofs? Your assertion than you’d typically use several waterproofing layers suggests not. I have experience building these systems in the real world and the documentation to support their use. BTW - flat roofs aren’t a thing. Expect in traditional building in desert areas. “Flat” roofs aren’t flat.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 months ago

                  I’m a construction engineer, though I think that’s just civil engineer in lot of the world.

                  BTW - flat roofs aren’t a thing. Expect in traditional building in desert areas. “Flat” roofs aren’t flat.

                  I assumed everyone knew what I meant. See some apartment building roofs.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        Kind of

        There are eco apartments (planning idk about practice); grass on the roof and trees growing up the side

        Lakehead University Orillia was going to do this for a new building but I don’t know what happened

    • @Pretzilla
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      7 months ago

      You know what cools roofs and generates electricity? Magic!

      Another trick: bifacial panels oriented to pick up the reflected light from highly reflective roofs

    • @WereCat
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      87 months ago

      What about Ultra white ceramic trees?

    • @[email protected]
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      47 months ago

      True though this is still practical for folks who live in deserts and other treeless places

    • @uis
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      17 months ago

      They also dampen noise

    • @Sorgan71
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      -27 months ago

      but trees look gross