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Design concept
Why use Nanotechnology?
Why choose glass?
How it all goes
together
Environmental features
Historical
or theoretical precedents
About UTS and
Nanotechnology
Website
Links
Design
concept
The Glass House reveals the latest in Nano technology research from
around the world.
It will showcase both commercially-available products, and prototypes
of recent research into materials science, to demonstrate the ways
in which these products can:
1. Enhance our lifestyle;
2. Improve natural lighting, thermal and acoustic performance of
buildings;
3.Result in lower maintenance costs over the lifetime of buildings.
The basis of the Glass House was to design an environmentally responsive,
ultra-low energy living space incorporating state-of-the-art material
technologies.

Why use Nanotechnology?
Nanotechnology is an emerging area of science that is concerned
with the control of matter at the scale of atoms and molecules.
There are a wide range of Nanotechnologies, with many current and
potential applications. With molecular control of matter we can
make smart materials that change their properties in response to
some stimulus from their surroundings - including instructions from
people. Some smart materials might even function like microscale
factories for the production of other materials or devices.
A useful way to think about Nanotechnology is not to reach for some
catch-all definition but to examine the ways in which the technologies
which exploit size effects are manifesting themselves. That is,
we can list the sorts of products and processes that are starting
to use nanoscale control of matter.
Some current Nanotechnologies and their applications include:
smart materials
Smart materials have almost endless potential they can change
in response to their surroundings in ways that natural (dumb materials)
dont. Some materials could have tiny computers embedded in
them which can send signals - like tyres that tell your car when
the tread is wearing unevenly, or paint that alerts your house of
a gas leak or an electrical fault. Really smart materials could
change colour on command, or generate electricity during the day
and make it available at night. Imagine coatings that refuse to
become dirty, and heal themselves when damaged!
nanopowders
Nanopowders are used for clear UV absorbing sunscreens (available
on the market now), paints and coatings of very high hardness and
density.
carbon nanotechologies
Nanotubes and fullerenes can be used for a wide variety of applications
including drug delivery, hydrogen storage, molecular transistors,
smart textiles, high-temperature superconductors and nanofluidics.
molecular electronics
The future of computing could lie with transistor arrays that are
not made using semiconductors but with molecules that act as switches.
Molecular electronic devices may be useful in environments where
semiconductors cannot go - such as biological environments.
The UTS nanotechnology website at www.nano.uts.edu.au is an excellent
source of information about these technologies.
The Glass House will include displays of both physical materials
and computer-generated simulations which explain in simple, tangible
terms how nano-engineered coatings and materials could work in a
domestic situation.
It will show how these coatings can alter reflection, absorption
and transmission of light through and off surfaces by selective
wavelength control of the materials attributes. These coatings can
therefore alter the properties of building materials as we know
them.
You
can find out more about Nanotechnology at www.nano.uts.edu.au
The Glass House will exhibit both physical materials and computer-generated
simulations which explain in simple, tangible terms how nano-engineered
coatings and materials could work in a domestic situation.
It will show how these coatings can alter reflection, absorption
and transmission of light through and off surfaces by selective
wavelength control of the materials attributes. These coatings can
therefore alter the properties of building materials as we know
them.

Why choose
glass?
Australians prefer to open up their buildings to make use of as
much daylight, views and indoor/ outdoor flow as possible. In the
past this has created a trade-off, with potentially high costs for
heating in winter and cooling in summer. However, with modern coating
technology applied on glass, things have changed considerably. We
can now use high-tech products to alter the environmental implications
of large areas of glass.
The Glass House will demonstrate recent advances in glass technology
and engineering by Pilkington and G.James to show:
Spectrally-selective qualities,
Improved thermal performance, &
Self cleaning attributes of glass.
The Glass House features a number of different glass types. One
of these is Pilkington
Activ glass, which has a transparent exterior coating using
nanotechnology that uses the forces of nature - natural ultraviolet
light and rain - to keep the glass free from organic dirt. It is
laminated to provide safety, noise reduction and fading control.
The secret of this self-cleaning glass is its special nanotechnology
coating, which works in two stages:
1. Using a photocatalytic process, the coating reacts
with ultra-violet rays from natural daylight to break down and disintegrate
organic dirt.
2. The second part of the process happens when rain or water hits
the glass. Because it is hydrophilic, instead of forming
droplets the water spreads evenly over the surface, and as it runs
off takes the dirt with it.
Compared with conventional glass, the water dries off very quickly
and does not leave unsightly drying spots.
The coating works continuously, with dirt being washed away whenever
it rains, or it can be lightly hosed down during long dry periods.
The coating needs only a small amount of UV radiation to activate
the coating so it works on overcast days.

How it all goes
together:
The Glass House will arrive on two trucks carrying 3 sections of
6.4x2.4m panels each weighing around 5 tons.
The house is fully prefabricated, and made almost entirely of glass:
The roof is 16mm thick toughened glass with a frit, or pattern,
etched
in the glass to reduce solar gain
The walls are 16mm single glazing
One side of the house will feature self-cleaning Pilkington
Activ glass, with the remaining walls of Pilkington Solar E Plus
and Low E
A glass floor 30mm thick will comprise two layers of 12mm,
and
a sacrificial 16mm layer on top.
Timber floors in the entry are treated with Nanotechnology coatings
to protect them from fading under ultraviolet light.
The steel portal frames might be treated with nanotechonology coatings
in the future, changing their performance as well.
Environmental
features
We all like our houses to open up to the environment and
be flooded with natural light. In this past, this has led to a tradeoff
with potentially high costs for heating and cooling. The Glass House
demonstrates how recent advances in glass technology can create
an environmentally responsive, low-energy design.
Environmental features include:
Photovoltaic cells mounted on the roof generate electricity.
These are
angled like louvres to moderate solar penetration into the building
Pilkington Solar E Plus and Low E glass are low-emissivity,
reducing unwanted heat gain in summer but are warm to touch in winter
The west and east elevations include glass louvres, which
create natural airflow to cool the building
You could also add roller screens with Nanotechnology-embedded
fabrics to block further sunlight.
Historical or theoretical precedents
Mies van der Rohes Farnsworth
House (1945) was a distinctive pavilion that hovered above a
grass lawn. It was made up of just two planes a roof and
floor enclosed in glass and supported by eight steel columns.
This transparent box was one of the most radically minimalist houses
ever designed. Four years later US architect Phillip Johnson designed
a Glass
House in Connecticut.
Like its predecessors, the Glass House of the Future challenges
the materiality of architecture; and the use of structure, technology
and design for housing in the twenty-first century.

About UTS
and Nanotechnology
The UTS Institute for Nanotechnology is involved with a range of
research in this field and the Glass House is its flagship project.
It will act as an educational tool raising public awareness
of the implications of this new technology. It will also allow newly
developed Nanotechnologies to be applied, showcased and trialed
in an actual building.
Read about the Nanohouse
research at UTS
Read a recent article about the NanoHouse in The
Australian
Channels Nines A
Current Affair also featured Nanotechnology recently
Website links
www.nano.uts.edu.au/nanohouse.html
www.nano.csiro.au
www.v-kool.com
www.myretsu.com
www.bangitup.com
www.nanotec.com.au
www.fiberopticlight.com

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