Thermal Performance of Artificial Turf for Roof Greening in Northern China: Insulation, Dissipation, and Urban Heat Island Mitigation
Yue Yu, Guopeng Li, Haoyun YeThe northward shift in climate zones and the urban heat island effect demand passive cooling for building roofs in northern regions. Artificial turf is a lightweight candidate, but existing studies treat it as homogeneous material, overlooking blade morphology and roof-scale thermal performance. This study conducted a scaled indoor experiment using a 1 m3 building model. Three artificial turfs with different blade lengths (Type A long, Type B medium, Type C short) were compared against concrete and XPS roofs under simulated summer solar radiation. Results show that blade morphology governs thermal performance. Type A exhibited the lowest peak surface temperature (48.9 °C vs. 53.4 °C and 60.6 °C), and its interface temperature (37.0 °C) was 15.1–19.0 °C lower than Types B and C, attributed to a static air insulation layer and enhanced convection. Its cooling rate (0.98 °C/min) was 1.69–2.33 times faster. Compared to concrete and XPS, Type A had lower surface temperature, less downward heat conduction, and a 29.3 °C drop in 30 min (concrete: 22.3 °C; XPS: 21.7 °C), showing urban heat island mitigation potential. Its heat flux reduction ratio reached 42.9%, with equivalent thermal resistance of ~0.40 m2·K/W, reducing summer peak indoor temperature by 3–6 °C in aging buildings. Double-layer stacking underperformed a single long-blade layer due to heat accumulation. Optimised long-blade turf challenges the view that low albedo inevitably causes high temperature, offering dual benefits of insulation and rapid dissipation for passive cooling in urban renewal.