This study investigates how an internal PCM–gypsum plaster lining modifies orientation-dependent heat transfer through lightweight model house envelopes over a full spring season. Two identical container houses (reference and PCM plastered) were monitored for 105 days under free-floating conditions, and surface temperatures of all opaque elements were processed into characteristic temperature differences and corresponding heat flux densities at daily extrema. The analysis showed that wall and roof orientation strongly governed both the magnitude and variability of these characteristic heat fluxes. West-facing façades and the roof exhibited the highest values due to solar gains and radiative exchanges, while the floor and north wall remained comparatively stable. Under conditions of nearly constant mean wall temperature, the characteristic flux framework revealed that the PCM lining systematically reshaped the temporal distribution of heat transfer and reduced the effective net energy exchange between indoor space and outdoor environment, most notably on solar-exposed west and south walls and on the roof. These orientation-resolved heat flux indicators provided a physically transparent basis for deciding on which envelope surfaces PCM integration could be most advantageous and where its application could be omitted without significantly compromising thermal performance under similar climatic conditions.
Ferencz et al. (Thu,) studied this question.