Trombe walls and solar chimneys are not widely used or well known in South Africa. A previous Green Building Handbook article described the University of Fort Hare teaching complex in East London (Stratford, 2012) that inter alia used a trombe system for a naturally ventilated building. This article explores the use of these passive devices further. Solar chimneys are passive elements that use solar energy to induce a buoyancy force that drives airflow and naturally ventilate the building. Buoyancy refers to one of the mechanisms by which motion in fluids such as air is caused by natural means. Buoyancy forces are induced by density differences due to the variation of temperature of the fluid: warmer and thus lighter fluid rises and cooler and thus denser fluid sinks.
Reference:
Kumirai, T, Grobler, J-H, and Conradie, DCU. 2015. Performance of a solar chimney by varying design parameters. In: Green Building Handbook of South Africa: The essential Guide Volume 8, pp 142-153.
Kumirai, T., Grobler, J. H., & Conradie, D. C. (2015). Performance of a solar chimney by varying design parameters., Worklist;26396 Alive2Green. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8302
Kumirai, T, Jan H Grobler, and Dirk CU Conradie. "Performance of a solar chimney by varying design parameters" In WORKLIST;26396, n.p.: Alive2Green. 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8302.
Kumirai T, Grobler JH, Conradie DC. Performance of a solar chimney by varying design parameters.. Worklist;26396. [place unknown]: Alive2Green; 2015. [cited yyyy month dd]. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/8302.