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Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
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Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
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Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates

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Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates
Journal Article

Quantifying the Relationship Between Mean Radiant Temperature and Indoor Air Temperature Across Building Orientations in Hot and Dry Steppe Climates

2025
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Overview
This study aims to create environmentally comfortable building designs in hot and dry steppe climates using more effective approaches. The purpose of this study is to assess the relationship between mean radiant temperature (MRT) and indoor air temperature (Tia), taking into account the orientation of buildings, for better building thermal performance. For this purpose, residential buildings with different orientations were selected in the study region ‘Garmian—northern Iraq’, and their thermal performance was evaluated. The results show how MRT contributes to the buildings’ thermal comfort. The outcomes of this research provide innovative empirical quantification of the correlation of MRT-Tia, as the regression coefficient (β) represents the rate of change in Tia per unit increase in MRT and ranges by orientation in the study area. The findings demonstrate that north-facing buildings buffer radiant heat gain (β~0.52), resulting in a 0.5 °C increase in indoor air temperature for each 1 °C rise in MRT. Moreover, west orientation delivers promising winter passive heating (MRT up to 22 °C and indoor air temperature up to 22.8 °C with a β of ~0.82). However, south-facing buildings perform poorly in the winter, with low MRT and a weak β (~0.44), contrasting with passive solar design strategies that favor south-facing buildings in the northern hemisphere. Furthermore, in the summer, the MRT is always higher than Tia, while it is lower in winter, indicating poor envelope and fenestration thermal insulation properties, which lead to excessive energy usage to maintain thermal comfort. Finally, the study suggests the novel quantified MRT-Tia mathematical correlation responds to the orientations for such climates, offering both diagnostic and predictive tools for thermal comfort performance optimization. This study is the first to empirically quantify orientation-specific MRT–Tia relationships in BSh climates, offering a novel diagnostic tool for sustainable building design. This study involved field observations in 36 residential row houses across four orientations. Key environmental and personal variables measured included mean radiant temperature (MRT), indoor air temperature (Tia), air velocity, relative humidity, metabolic rate, and clothing insulation.