warmteretentie
Warmteretentie is the ability of a material or system to retain thermal energy, i.e., to store heat and release it later. In building physics it is closely related to the concepts of thermal mass and thermal inertia. The amount of sensible heat stored is proportional to mass, specific heat capacity and the temperature change, described by Q = m·c·ΔT. Materials with high density and high specific heat, such as concrete or water, store more heat for a given temperature change. Latent heat storage using phase-change materials adds additional capacity at a chosen temperature.
The degree of warmteretentie depends on temperature, material properties and geometry. Thermal mass is effective when
Applications include enhancing indoor comfort and reducing heating demand in buildings, passive solar design, and solar-thermal
Measuring warmteretentie involves storage capacity (sensible and latent) and the time constant for heat loss. A