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posted by martyb on Thursday August 20 2020, @10:00AM   Printer-friendly
from the take-my-money dept.

This 'Cold Tube' can beat the summer heat without relying on air conditioning:

"Air conditioners work by cooling down and dehumidifying the air around us—an expensive and not particularly environmentally friendly proposition," explains project co-lead Adam Rysanek, assistant professor of environmental systems at UBC's school of architecture and landscape architecture, whose work focuses on future energy systems and green buildings. "The Cold Tube works by absorbing the heat directly emitted by radiation from a person without having to cool the air passing over their skin. This achieves a significant amount of energy savings."

The Cold Tube is a system of rectangular wall or ceiling panels that are kept cold by chilled water circulating within them. Since heat naturally moves by radiation from a hotter surface to a colder surface, when a person stands beside or under the panel, their body heat radiates towards the colder panel. This creates a sensation of cooling like cold air flowing over the body even if the air temperature is quite high.

Although these types of cooling panels have been used in the building industry for several decades, what makes the Cold Tube unique is that it does not need to be combined with a dehumidification system. Just as a cold glass of lemonade would condense water on a hot summer day, cooling down walls and ceilings in buildings would also condense water without first drying out the air around the panels. The researchers behind the Cold Tube conceived of an airtight, humidity-repelling membrane to encase the chilled panels to prevent condensation from forming while still allowing radiation to travel through.

A new cooling system for your home?


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday August 20 2020, @01:14PM (1 child)

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 20 2020, @01:14PM (#1039339) Journal
    Is post menopause a psychological condition? I don't think so despite it having psychological symptoms. My take is that she probably has poor regulation of body temperature due to post menopause and perhaps other aging conditions, and perhaps to light body weight (high surface area to body mass).
  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by JoeMerchant on Thursday August 20 2020, @03:21PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Thursday August 20 2020, @03:21PM (#1039387)

    Humidity is constant - at 72F she feels hot, but only if it's hot outside. at 76F she feels cold, but only if it's cold outside. Some of this could be radiant heating/cooling near the windows, but she complains of the temperature when she's far from the windows... Yes, menopause screws up thermal regulation pretty badly, but some of this is overcompensation.

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