Saving energy with light? Experimental studies assessing the impact of colour temperature on thermal comfort
Saving energy with light? Experimental studies assessing the impact of colour temperature on thermal comfort
We tested whether the colour temperature of the illumination (realised through manipulating the ceiling light) impacted on thermal comfort, based on the hypothesis that a lower colour temperature is associated with feeling warmer and a higher colour temperature with feeling cooler. If confirmed, then light might be a tool for energy-saving through allowing ambient air temperatures to vary over a wider range and hence reducing the need for space heating and cooling.
Testing took place in a climate chamber. In Study 1, comfort ratings were collected using thermal comfort surveys (N = 32). In Study 2, an observational design was used, where changes in clothing level, interpreted as thermal discomfort responses, were observed (N = 32). We compared comfort ratings and changes in clothing level under light with a colour temperature of 2700 K vs. 6500 K. Results partly confirmed the hypotheses: both self-report and observation indicated higher comfort under the low colour temperature. Further research will need to replicate findings in a real-world setting to see if light might indeed be a tool to modulate thermal comfort, and hence reduce usage of heating and cooling.
thermal comfort, colour temperature, hue-heat-hypothesis, energy saving
45-57
Huebner, G.M.
296ea1d1-481a-4514-a94a-2bc5919fb5fa
Shipworth, D.T.
430a8af5-baeb-4e13-a5fd-ae6b126377ed
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Witzel, C.
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
Raynham, P.
76804610-0cf2-47c0-bb63-9469078249d7
Chan, W.
27980e6d-0f21-4395-9801-45c0d81984f4
May 2016
Huebner, G.M.
296ea1d1-481a-4514-a94a-2bc5919fb5fa
Shipworth, D.T.
430a8af5-baeb-4e13-a5fd-ae6b126377ed
Gauthier, S.
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Witzel, C.
dfb994f1-7007-441a-9e1a-ddb167f44166
Raynham, P.
76804610-0cf2-47c0-bb63-9469078249d7
Chan, W.
27980e6d-0f21-4395-9801-45c0d81984f4
Huebner, G.M., Shipworth, D.T., Gauthier, S., Witzel, C., Raynham, P. and Chan, W.
(2016)
Saving energy with light? Experimental studies assessing the impact of colour temperature on thermal comfort.
Energy Research & Social Science, 15, .
(doi:10.1016/j.erss.2016.02.008).
Abstract
We tested whether the colour temperature of the illumination (realised through manipulating the ceiling light) impacted on thermal comfort, based on the hypothesis that a lower colour temperature is associated with feeling warmer and a higher colour temperature with feeling cooler. If confirmed, then light might be a tool for energy-saving through allowing ambient air temperatures to vary over a wider range and hence reducing the need for space heating and cooling.
Testing took place in a climate chamber. In Study 1, comfort ratings were collected using thermal comfort surveys (N = 32). In Study 2, an observational design was used, where changes in clothing level, interpreted as thermal discomfort responses, were observed (N = 32). We compared comfort ratings and changes in clothing level under light with a colour temperature of 2700 K vs. 6500 K. Results partly confirmed the hypotheses: both self-report and observation indicated higher comfort under the low colour temperature. Further research will need to replicate findings in a real-world setting to see if light might indeed be a tool to modulate thermal comfort, and hence reduce usage of heating and cooling.
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1-s2.0-S2214629616300196-main.pdf
- Version of Record
Text
Huebner et al. (2016) Saving energy with light
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 21 February 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2016
Published date: May 2016
Keywords:
thermal comfort, colour temperature, hue-heat-hypothesis, energy saving
Organisations:
Energy & Climate Change Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 389838
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/389838
PURE UUID: e9139e8f-9dc7-49bc-b79b-fdfd2ee6c53a
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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2016 11:33
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:06
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Author:
G.M. Huebner
Author:
D.T. Shipworth
Author:
P. Raynham
Author:
W. Chan
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