Thermal Transport in Straw Insulation

Thermal Transport in Straw Insulation
Written by esba

An evacuable guarded hot plate for thermal conductivity measurements between 200 and 800°C was used to investigate the heat transfer in barley straw. The different thermal transfer mechanisms (solid, gaseous conduction and infrared-radiative heat transfer), as well as coupling effects, were separated. The measured thermal conductivities (λ = 0.041 W m−1 K−1) are similar to those of conventional insulation materials such as foams, glass or mineral fibres which are widely used as building insulation materials. Straw from barley or wheat, which is a low-cost, renewable material readily available worldwide, is therefore an interesting alternative to conventional insulation materials.

Authors:

  1. Beck, A.
  2. Heinemann, U.
  3. Reidinger, M.
  4. Fricke, J.

Link: https://doi.org/10.1177/1097196304039831

About the author

esba

The European Straw Building Association is an independent European association, devoid of any profit making motive. The object of the Association is to promote and develop the use of straw, as a sustainable way of building in all the senses of the term “sustainable”: renewable, ecological, healthy, energy and climate efficient, social and economic.
The Association is a federation composed of organisations and people particularly concerned with the use of straw in buildings.