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C074 -- Results from Laboratory and Field Study of Thin Triple Pane Windows

M00008321

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C074 -- Results from Laboratory and Field Study of Thin Triple Pane Windows

Conference Proceeding by ASHRAE, 2022

Patricia Gunderson, Member ASHRAE; Edward Louie, Member ASHRAE; Katherine Cort; Samuel Rosenberg, Member ASHRAE; Cheryn Metzger, Member ASHRAE

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Heat transfer through windows accounts for a significant percentage of a building’s energy use and adds substantially to the peak cooling load of a home. In recent years, improvements in glass manufacturing have enabled the use of a very thin central pane of glass similar to a cell phone screen to produce a thin triple-pane window, for finished insulated glass units (IGUs) with an overall thickness similar to standard double-pane windows. Because this highly insulating “thin triple” glass product can be incorporated into almost any existing window frame and can be fabricated at a modest added cost, the U.S. Department of Energy sponsored laboratory and field demonstration testing of thin triple-pane windows to validate thermal performance and installation requirements in real-life field settings. Thin triple pane windows were evaluated at the PNNL Lab Homes, a matched pair of manufactured houses located on PNNL’s campus in Richland, Washington and also at eight different field study sites around the country. The experimental results include a comparison of heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) energy usage, condensation potential, occupant comfort, sound infiltration, and thermal performance. Field study data will be gathered through September of 2022; preliminary results are being shared in this paper.