August 16, 2020
Journal Article

Where Are White Roofs More Effective in Cooling the Surface?

Abstract

Solar reflective roofs (also called white or cool roofs) are a common heat mitigation strategy. By reflecting more sunlight than regular roofs, cool roofs experience lower surface temperatures and produce less heating of the surrounding air. The effectiveness of cool roofs, quantified by the surface temperature difference between cool roofs and regular roofs ??????, is known to vary spatially. A common perception is that ?????? is controlled by solar radiation that reaches the roof surface. Here we use an Earth System Model and a surface energy balance model to show that the spatial variability of ??????, when normalized by the albedo difference between cool roofs and regular roofs (????), is in fact more controlled by an energy distribution factor that encodes the efficiencies of surface energy balance components in dissipating heat. Our results suggest that painting the roof white is more effective in reducing the roof surface temperature when the roof has less water holding capacity and smaller thermal admittance and is located in places with more solar radiation, less precipitation, and lower wind speed.

Revised: September 29, 2020 | Published: August 16, 2020

Citation

Wang L., M. Huang, and D. Li. 2020. Where Are White Roofs More Effective in Cooling the Surface?. Geophysical Research Letters 47, no. 15:Article No. e2020GL087853. PNNL-SA-150454. doi:10.1029/2020GL087853