Photovoltaic brise soleil
Brise soleil are a relatively common installation solutions for building window facing directly sunward. A bris soleil is normally directly above a window opening and protrude out a certain distance. This distance prevents higher summer sunshine directly hitting the window, causing over heating, but allows the lower winter sunlight through into the window.
Photovoltaic brise soleil work on the same principle, but because the shade is made of a photovoltaic panel, the higher summer sun generates electricity as it deflects the sunshine from the window. These kinds of brise soleil are less common but offer the same external shading which can be fitted over the entire exterior of a building or solely over the problematic window, whilst also contributing to renewable electricity generation electrical power. The types of panels used can vary significantly from solid panels, to individual cells on glass or translucent cells.
Key aspects in the design of photovoltaic brise soleil are consideration of the orientation, overshadowing and safety in maintenance. The southern sides of buildings typically require horizontal brise soleil above the window opening to block the high summer sun.
It is also possible to consider a light shelf type of installation which is installed part way down a window, normally at the transom, where there is a low level large glazed unit and a higher level strip opening unit. This kind of installation blocks some sun to the main glazed ares in summer, particularly at desk level, but it is traditionally also light on its upper surface to reflect light onto the ceiling of the inside space. In teh case of a PV brise soleil, the internal edge may be reflective, but the body of the shade will be darker PV though glossy with some reflectional capabilities.
For the east and west facing sides of a building vertical shading elements might be introduced, though these need to be modelled both in terms of shading ability and electrical production. be used, to follow the sun and actively control the solar gain of the building. This allows optimum protection at the appropriate time of day and year.
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