A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Sustainable design of reinforced concrete structures through embodied energy optimization
Highlights ► Embodied energy minimization as an objective in sustainable structural design. ► Tradeoffs between cost and embodied energy minimization. ► Optimization of embodied energy in a reinforced concrete beam as proof of concept. ► Reduction of up to 10% in embodied energy for up to 5% increase in cost.
Abstract As the world struggles to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, much attention is focused on making buildings operate more efficiently. However, there is another, less recognized aspect of the built environment: the embodied energy of buildings, which represents the energy consumed in construction, including the entire life cycle of materials used. Architects and structural engineers extensively perform designs of buildings with steel and reinforced concrete–materials that, to different degrees, are energy intensive. This presents an opportunity to use structural optimization techniques, which have traditionally been employed to minimize the total cost or total weight of a structure, to minimize the embodied energy. With this in mind, an analysis is carried out to determine the implications, from the point of view of cost, of optimizing a simple reinforced concrete structural member, in this case a rectangular beam of fixed moment and shear strengths, such that embodied energy is minimized. For the embodied energy and cost values assumed, results indicate a reduction on the order of 10% in embodied energy for an increase on the order of 5% in costs.
Sustainable design of reinforced concrete structures through embodied energy optimization
Highlights ► Embodied energy minimization as an objective in sustainable structural design. ► Tradeoffs between cost and embodied energy minimization. ► Optimization of embodied energy in a reinforced concrete beam as proof of concept. ► Reduction of up to 10% in embodied energy for up to 5% increase in cost.
Abstract As the world struggles to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, much attention is focused on making buildings operate more efficiently. However, there is another, less recognized aspect of the built environment: the embodied energy of buildings, which represents the energy consumed in construction, including the entire life cycle of materials used. Architects and structural engineers extensively perform designs of buildings with steel and reinforced concrete–materials that, to different degrees, are energy intensive. This presents an opportunity to use structural optimization techniques, which have traditionally been employed to minimize the total cost or total weight of a structure, to minimize the embodied energy. With this in mind, an analysis is carried out to determine the implications, from the point of view of cost, of optimizing a simple reinforced concrete structural member, in this case a rectangular beam of fixed moment and shear strengths, such that embodied energy is minimized. For the embodied energy and cost values assumed, results indicate a reduction on the order of 10% in embodied energy for an increase on the order of 5% in costs.
Sustainable design of reinforced concrete structures through embodied energy optimization
Yeo, DongHun (author) / Gabbai, Rene D. (author)
Energy and Buildings ; 43 ; 2028-2033
2011-04-23
6 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Sustainable design of reinforced concrete structures through embodied energy optimization
Online Contents | 2011
|