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Solar Heat Gain in Buildings

How Roofs, Walls, Windows - and Hidden Moisture - Reduce Cooling Efficiency

Many buildings struggle with rising cooling loads not because of inefficient chillers, but because heat continuously enters through the building envelope.

Solar heat gain occurs when sunlight transfers thermal energy into interior spaces through:

  • Roof surfaces exposed to direct radiation
  • External walls absorbing ambient heat
  • Glass windows allowing radiant energy indoors

At the same time, humidity can penetrate conventional paint layers, creating moisture retention that leads to mold formation on exterior surfaces — another sign that the building envelope is not performing efficiently.

Understanding these processes is essential for improving passive cooling and reducing energy consumption.

What Causes Solar Heat Gain in Buildings? 

Solar heat gain happens when building surfaces absorb or transmit radiant energy from the sun. Roofs, walls, and glass windows convert solar radiation into heat, which increases indoor temperature and forces HVAC systems to work harder.

Humidity penetration through standard paint coatings can also trap moisture, creating conditions that allow external mold to grow.

How Does Heat Enter Through Roofs and Walls?

Roof and wall materials absorb solar radiation during the day. This heat moves through the structure by conduction and radiates into interior spaces.

Common effects include:

  • Higher indoor temperatures
  • Increased cooling demand
  • Longer HVAC runtime

Why Do Glass Windows Increase Solar Heat Gain?

Glass allows short-wave solar radiation to pass through easily. Once inside, the energy converts into long-wave heat that becomes trapped — similar to a greenhouse effect.

This results in:

  • Localized overheating near windows
  • Increased air-conditioning load
  • Uneven temperature distribution

Why Does Mold Form on Exterior Surfaces?

Standard paint coatings are often not vapor-resistant. Humidity can slip through microscopic pores, allowing moisture to accumulate within the paint layer.

Over time:

  • Moisture retention encourages microbial growth
  • Mold appears on external walls
  • Surface thermal performance declines

Engineering Insight

Understanding Solar Heat Gain from a Building Physics Perspective

Solar heat gain is a combination of three heat-transfer mechanisms:

  1. Radiation — direct energy from sunlight striking surfaces
  2. Conduction — heat moving through roofs and walls
  3. Re-radiation — stored heat released into interior spaces

The building envelope acts as both a thermal barrier and a thermal storage medium. When surfaces absorb more energy than they reflect, interior cooling loads increase significantly.

Roof Heat Gain: The Largest Source of Thermal Load

Roofs receive the highest solar exposure throughout the day.

How Heat Builds Up

  • Dark or aged roofing materials absorb radiation.
  • Heat accumulates within structural layers.
  • Thermal energy migrates downward into occupied spaces.

Engineering Consequences

  • Increased ceiling surface temperature
  • Higher return air temperature at AHUs
  • Elevated chiller load

In tropical climates, roof heat gain can account for a major portion of cooling demand.

Wall Heat Gain: Continuous Ambient Heat Transfer

External walls absorb both direct solar radiation and ambient environmental heat.

Factors That Increase Wall Heat Gain

  • High thermal mass without reflective coating
  • Surface oxidation or weathering
  • Poorly insulated facade materials

As walls warm up, heat conducts inward even after sunset, extending cooling demand into the evening.

Glass Windows and the Greenhouse Effect

Glass behaves differently from opaque materials.

What Happens Physically

  • Short-wave solar radiation enters through glazing.
  • Interior surfaces absorb energy.
  • Heat re-emits as long-wave radiation, which glass partially traps.

Impact on Cooling Systems

  • Localized hot zones near facades
  • Increased humidity and discomfort
  • Higher energy consumption during peak sun hours

Without proper surface control, glass becomes a major pathway for solar heat gain.

Humidity Slippage and Mold Formation on Exterior Paint

Exterior paint often appears waterproof but remains permeable to water vapor.

How Moisture Penetrates Paint Layers

  • Humid air diffuses through microscopic pores.
  • Temperature differences cause condensation within the coating.
  • Moisture remains trapped beneath the surface.

Why Mold Develops

Mold thrives in environments where moisture, warmth, and organic particles coexist. When humidity accumulates under paint, microbial growth begins, often appearing as dark patches or streaks.

Engineering Implications

  • Reduced surface reflectivity
  • Increased heat absorption
  • Accelerated coating degradation

Mold growth is not only an aesthetic issue — it signals that thermal and moisture control are compromised.

The Combined Effect: Heat Gain and Moisture Degradation

When solar radiation increases surface temperature and humidity penetrates coatings:

  • Roofs and walls store more heat
  • Paint layers deteriorate faster
  • Mold growth increases thermal absorption

This creates a cycle where surfaces become progressively less efficient at reflecting heat, raising cooling loads across the building.

Signs Your Building May Be Experiencing Excess Solar Heat Gain

Look for indicators such as:

  • Rising cooling energy despite stable occupancy
  • Hot zones near roof areas or windows
  • External walls showing discoloration or mold
  • Increased indoor humidity levels

These signs often point to envelope-level thermal inefficiency rather than HVAC system failure.

Rethinking Cooling Efficiency: Start with the Building Envelope

Many energy-saving strategies focus on mechanical systems, but reducing heat entering the building can lower cooling demand before HVAC equipment even operates.

Modern passive cooling approaches aim to:

  • Reflect solar radiation at the surface
  • Reduce conductive heat transfer through walls and roofs
  • Manage humidity penetration within coatings

Improving the thermal performance of the building envelope can significantly reduce overall energy consumption.

Speak to an Efficiency Specialist

If your building experiences overheating, rising cooling costs, or recurring exterior mold, the problem may lie in hidden solar heat gain and moisture behaviour.

👉 Explore strategies designed to improve passive cooling and protect building surfaces.

Explore Related Energy Loss Topics

This problem connects to broader thermal-efficiency challenges across industries:

* 👉 Building Energy Loss

* 👉 Industry Heat Transfer Loss

* 👉 Incomplete Combustion of Diesel