
1) Architectural element 2) Construction terminology 3) Solar architecture
Found on
https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/trombe-wall

A Trombe wall is a passive solar building technique where a wall is built on the winter sun side of a building with a glass external layer and a high heat capacity internal layer separated by a layer of air. Heat in close to UV spectrum passes through the glass almost unhindered then is absorbed by the wall that then re-radiates in the far infrare...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trombe_wall

A wall with high thermal mass used to store solar energy passively in a solar home. It is named after the French inventor, Felix Trombe, who popularized the design in 1964 al though Edward Morse had patented it back in 1881. A Trombe wall consists of a vertical wall, built of a material such as ston...
Found on
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/T/AE_trombe_wall.html

A wall with high thermal mass used to store solar energy passively in a solar home. The wall absorbs solar energy and transfers it to the space behind the wall by means of radiation and by convection currents moving through spaces under, in front of, and on top of the wall.
Found on
http://www.electromn.com/glossary/t.htm

a black-painted masonry (earth, brick, block, stone or mass concrete) wall with glazing on the southerly side. The wall acts as absorber, heat store and emitter. Felix Trombe was the French designer who designed the Trombe Wall.
Found on
http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20842

Developed by French engineer Felix Trombe and architect Jacques Michel in the 1960s, a trombe wall is a solar building element that is designed for cold countries. Similar to the greenhouse principle, it is when a glass external layer is built outside walls with openings, absorbing the heat during sunlit hours of winter. The heat is then slowly rel...
Found on
https://www.archdaily.com/898221/45-construction-terms-and-concepts-all-arc

A wall with high thermal mass used to store solar energy passively in a solar home. The wall absorbs solar energy and transfers it to the space behind the wall by means of radiation and by convection currents moving through spaces under, in front of, and on top of the wall.
Found on
https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/22819
No exact match found.