Loughborough Echo

£1m funding for three Uni academics

Going towards solar project

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

THREE Loughborou­gh University academics have received research funding as part of a £36m project that looks to accelerate market adoption of new solar-powered building design.

Professor Kevin Lomas, Professor Michael Walls and Professor Philip Eames have been awarded more than £1m in total to conduct three different strands of research under the Active Building Centre (ABC) – a multi-million pound project being led by Swansea University that was given the green light last month by the Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond.

Funded by the UK government - through the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund and UKRI - and based in Swansea University, ABC will be a national centre of excellence working with supply chains from energy and constructi­on supported by 10 universiti­es, including Loughborou­gh.

The ABC vision is to transform the UK constructi­on and energy sectors through the deployment of buildings powered by the sun to create energy resilient communitie­s and to contribute to electric vehicle and decarbonis­ation targets.

ABC will focus on developing materials that use heat and light to make electricit­y and on ways of storing energy and releas- ing it through ‘smart energy systems’. New technologi­es and methods of constructi­on will enable the cost-effective production of highly energy efficient walls, roofs and windows.

Active buildings can save money on energy bills and contribute to a more sustainabl­e world. They can, for example, combine the use of solar cells and battery storage to draw solar-heated air into buildings and are also able to use ground source heating to provide warmth in the winter.

Professor Lomas, of the School of Architectu­re, Building and Civil Engineerin­g, is Loughborou­gh’s building environmen­t beacon lead and is leading the university’s involvemen­t in the threeand-a-half-year project.

He will look at energy efficiency in houses and other buildings and will use modelling to examine different building types, materials, insulation and photovolta­ic (PV) systems – which convert light to energy – and their effect on heat and electricit­y requiremen­ts.

Professor Walls, of the Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology (CREST) in the School of Mechanical, Electrical and Manufactur­ing Engineerin­g, is focusing on integratin­g PV materials into components like roof tiles so homes can be constructe­d with solar technology already built-in, meaning there will be no need for bolt-on panels.

The Director of CREST, Professor Eames, is to explore heat supply and thermal technologi­es, in particular, the role of phase-change materials, which store and release thermal energy in order to maintain a regulated temperatur­e and have the ability to store much more energy than convention­al water-based thermal stores.

Working together, the Loughborou­gh academics will employ three researcher­s, who will collaborat­e with other Midlands universiti­es – such as Birmingham and Nottingham – that are members of the Energy Research Accelerato­r partnershi­p.

Professor Lomas said: “This is a terrific opportunit­y to become part of a new wave of thinking about how to make deep cuts in the greenhouse gas emissions from buildings whilst simultaneo­usly reducing energy demand and constructi­on costs, and creating new business opportunit­ies.

“The research requires the world-class cuttingedg­e modelling, measuremen­t and manufactur­ing capability available at Loughborou­gh.”

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