Thermochromic Topologies

The project aims to visualise conventionally invisible parameters of our environment on surfaces. Each panel has a unique geometry that leads to the emergence of distinct patterns once the surface temperature changes. This is made possible by informing the panels’ design through digital simulations and fabrication. The thermochromic coating incrementally reveals colourful layers beneath when exposed to temperatures above 27°C. This is the threshold value above which humans generally experience discomfort. Consequently, the project creates a communication interface between the built and the natural environment through material intelligence and design.

Institute
Universität Innsbruck, Institut für Experimentelle Architektur, Hochbau

Poject Lead
Andreas Körner

Team
Catalina Tripolt

Acknowledgements
Julian Edelmann, Kilian Bauer, Ernest Hager, Philipp Schwaderer, Jan Contala

Funding
Tiroler Wissenschaftsförderung (TWF), Land Tirol

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With increasing awareness of our environmental responsibilities, architects must seek out alternative solutions to mechanical heating and cooling where possible. The resulting shift in paradigm – from a demand of a homogeneously tempered indoor environment to a heterogeneous field of varying comfort zones – requires new design tools to actively communicate qualities of space. Most thermal comfort parameters are invisible and hard to communicate across distances. This project aims to find solutions for this dilemma while exploring it from the designer’s position.

Sustainability, passive environmental strategies and ecological thinking are embraced creatively and innovatively. This pushes the boundaries of design thinking as well as finding new digital fabrication and design methodologies to generate intricate and sustainable ornament.

Thermochromic materials change colour when the material’s temperature exceeds a certain threshold. The effect can be a change in hue, saturation or transparency. The project focused on a change of transparency, where the disappearance of a coating layer reveals the underlying material above a temperature threshold of 27C – the same temperature above which a room’s temperature is widely perceived as uncomfortable. Computational fluid dynamics simulations (CFD) were used to simulate changes in temperature and airflow along surfaces.

Thermochromic materials change colour when the material’s temperature exceeds a certain threshold. The effect can be a change in hue, saturation or transparency. The project focused on a change of transparency, where the disappearance of a coating layer reveals the underlying material above a temperature threshold of 27C – the same temperature above which a room’s temperature is widely perceived as uncomfortable. Computational fluid dynamics simulations (CFD) were used to simulate changes in temperature and airflow along surfaces.

There is a demand for innovative design solutions for communicating environmental conditions and parameters of indoor climate to inhabitants through smart materials and passive strategies. Existing research into thermochromic elements in architecture is often focussing on the technological aspects of surface actuation.
This project investigated the design consequences deriving from a generative design process, that uses invisible environmental parameters to drive performative reliefs.

Institute
Universität Innsbruck, Institut für Experimentelle Architektur, Hochbau

Poject Lead
Andreas Körner

Team
Catalina Tripolt

Acknowledgements
Julian Edelmann, Kilian Bauer, Ernest Hager, Philipp Schwaderer, Jan Contala

Funding
Tiroler Wissenschaftsförderung (TWF), Land Tirol

Image Credits Paulina Schröder, Virginia Binsch

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