Direct Solar Gain

Direct gain is the heat from the sun being collected and contained in an occupied space. This heat can be retained by the building’s thermal mass, or can be avoided with reflective materials.

Direct solar gain is important for any site that needs heating, because it is the simplest and least costly way of passively heating a building. Avoiding direct solar gain is also important in hot sunny climates.

Good direct gain is measured or predicted by determining how much heat energy the sun delivers to the interior space throughout the day and year. In many climates, more heat gain is desired in the winter, when the sun is low, while less or none is desired in the summer. Likewise, it is usually desired more in the morning, but less or none in the late afternoon. Direct gain is not the total amount of incident solar radiation, since not all of that will enter and be retained in the space.

Direct gain through walls / roofs, and through glazing

Sunlight can heat a space through the solid walls or roofs of the envelope. Sunlight also enters the space through windows, and heats interior surfaces.

Some of the sun's light is long-wavelength radiation, which is heat; in addition, the light of any wavelength absorbed by surfaces turns into heat in those materials. These materials then warm people in the room by conducting heat to them directly, by warming air which carries heat by convection, and by reradiating their heat.

Glazing for Solar Gain

Aperture placement and area is an enormous factor in the amount of heat that is gained, at what times of day, and at what seasons of year. For most latitudes, it is optimized by large areas of equator-facing glazing, with the major living spaces exposed directly behind. Shades block excess sun at warmer times and allow the sun's heat in at cooler times.

Smart orientation, sizing, and shading must be combined with smart selection of glazing properties. Different kinds of glazing can pull the sun's heat into the interior, or reject it, or let interior heat escape. Several glazing types may be appropriate on different faces of the building.

Avoiding Losses

The same large areas of glazing that let heat in during the day can also readily let heat out at night. Heat can escape through windows both through direct heat transfer, or by allowing long-wave radiation to pass through as interior materials re-radiate their heat. Thus, some form of nighttime protection should be incorporated to minimize any conduction and convection losses through windows. Thick drawn curtains with a closed cornice board or "pelmet" to seal the top can be used, or insulated internal/external roller shutters.

Thermal Mass for Solar Gain

Thermal mass is crucial to comfort with solar heat gain. It absorbs and retains heat, slowing the rate at which the sun heats the space and the rate at which the space loses heat when the sun is gone. Without thermal mass, heat that has entered a space will simply re-radiate back out quickly, making the space overly hot with sunlight and overly cold without.

Surface Color and Cool Roofs

The amount of sunlight absorbed by a material (and thus converted to heat) depends on its color. Light colored surfaces will bounce light around within the space, distributing it over a greater number of surfaces. Dark colored materials will absorb most of the incident energy as soon as it strikes. Both of these can be useful, depending on the situation.

Roofs often need to avoid direct solar gain in hot climates. "Cool roofs" use light colors to reflect most of the sun's heat. Cool roof surfaces are often far more effective than simply adding roof insulation. For example, the surface of a black roof can easily get 40°C (75°F) hotter than the surface of a white roof on a sunny day.

Dark colored roofs get much hotter than light colored roofs

One common measurement of this is albedo, the ability of the material to reflect sunlight. Light colored roofs have “high albedo.” But the measurement most often used for codes and standards1 is Solar Reflectance Index (SRI), which considers both reflectance and emissivity2.

SRI is a scale where 0 is the least heat-reflective standard black paint (reflectance 0.05, emittance 0.90), and 100 is the most heat-reflective standard white paint (reflectance 0.80, emittance 0.90). This means that it is possible for some materials to have an SRI slightly below zero or slightly above 100.

To be considered a "cool roof" by common standards1 requires an SRI above 78 for flat roofs, and above 29 for steep roofs. Some typical values are below.

Material surface SRI
Black acrylic paint 0
Typical asphalt 6
“White” asphalt shingle 21
Light gravel-surfaced roof 37
Typical concrete 19 - 52
White acrylic paint 100
Reflective roof membrane 80 - 110

Table of common Solar Reflectance Indexes

Solar Reflectance and absorption vs. heat reflection and emittance, for common materials.
(click to enlarge.) From Sun, Wind, and Light.


1 LEED NC v2.2 Site credit 7.2: Heat Island Effect--Roofs

2 Emissivity is the ability of the roof surface to radiate absorbed heat. Measured on a scale of 0 to 1, where 1 is the most emissive (doesn’t retain as much heat). Low emissivity may benefit buildings in colder climates by retaining heat and reducing the heating load. To prevent the heat island effect, high emissivity is preferable.

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