Applications of Earth-to-Air Heat Exchangers: A Holistic Review
Giouli Mihalakakou, Manolis Souliotis, Maria Papadaki, George Halkos,, John Paravantis, Sofoklis Makridis, Spiros Papaefthimiou

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive review of earth-to-air heat exchangers, examining their thermal performance, recent technological advances, and potential for energy savings and improved indoor comfort in building applications.
Contribution
It offers a holistic overview of research, methodologies, and trends in earth-to-air heat exchangers, including classification of models and analysis of key system parameters.
Findings
System design, especially length and burial depth, significantly affects efficiency.
Hybrid technologies are emerging as promising advancements.
Experimental validation remains limited, highlighting the need for further research.
Abstract
The building sector is responsible for 40% of primary energy consumption, with heating/cooling covering the most significant portion. Thus, passive heating/cooling applications have gained significant ground during the last three decades, with many research activities on the subject. Among passive cooling/heating applications, ground cooling (especially earth-to-air heat exchangers) has been highlighted as a remarkably attractive technological research subjects because of its significant contribution to the reduction of heating/cooling energy loads; the improvement of indoor thermal comfort conditions; and the amelioration of the urban environment. This paper presents a holistic review of state-of-the-art research, methodologies, and technologies of earth-to-air heat exchangers that help achieve energy conservation and thermal comfort in the built environment. The review covers the…
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