ORCID
- Fox, Matthew: 0000-0002-5578-8064
Abstract
Many buildings suffer from defects in the building envelope, such as missing insulation, thermal bridging, cracks and moisture problems. Thermography is one technology that can help to identify such defects. However, there are different approaches towards assessing the building envelope. Pass-by thermography is an emerging method, which is used to capture single thermal images of external building elevations. Compared with traditional walk-through thermography, it is much quicker and cheaper to perform. Yet it is currently unclear how successful this methodology is at detecting building defects. This paper qualitatively compares pass-by thermography and walk-through thermography. A set of 122 residential dwellings in South West England was inspected using the both methodologies. Results show that substantially more defects were detected using walk-through thermography, with internal inspections yielding the greatest number of detected defects. Significant constraints with walk-past thermography were identified, such as unknown occupancy behaviour, transient climatic conditions, fixed viewing angles and spatial resolution limitations, which were all found to have a greater impact on image results than during walk-through thermography.Although trends in conductivity defects were found from target comparison analysis between similar dwellings, viewing single external elevations under walk-past thermography was found to miss many different defect types, which would have normally been discovered during traditional walk-through thermography.
DOI
10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.06.011
Publication Date
2016-08-15
Publication Title
Building and Environment
Volume
105
ISSN
0360-1323
Embargo Period
2017-06-10
Organisational Unit
School of Art, Design and Architecture
First Page
317
Last Page
331
Recommended Citation
Fox, M., Goodhew, S., & De, W. (2016) 'Building defect detection: External versus internal thermography', Building and Environment, 105, pp. 317-331. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.buildenv.2016.06.011