Winter thermal comfort and indoor air quality in Swedish grade school classrooms, as assessed by the children
Winter thermal comfort and indoor air quality in Swedish grade school classrooms, as assessed by the children
This paper presents results from a pilot thermal comfort study in five Swedish grade school classrooms in three different buildings during winter 2015/16. The study includes measurements of environmental parameters (air temperature, globe temperature, relative humidity, air speed, CO2) and questionnaire surveys designed to match the children’s cognitive level. The questionnaire includes questions about thermal perception, air quality and air movement, as well as the children’s clothing level. The aim of this study is to investigate whether recently found differences in thermal sensation between children and adults outside the heating season also apply to the winter season. Children’s assessment is compared to the objective measurements during the surveys, to winter design criteria for school classrooms and to comfort temperatures from previous studies. The results agree with the previously found warmer sensation of children compared to adults’ predicted thermal sensation based on the currently used PMV model, although this time the difference is smaller. Regarding air quality, no relationship was found between children’s assessment and CO2 levels.
Teli, Despoina
4e57e6dd-e0dc-49ef-b711-974ba1c978df
Dalenbäck, Jan-Olof
df8e6769-aecb-46f7-94f3-79df3c1b37f7
Ekberg, Lars
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July 2016
Teli, Despoina
4e57e6dd-e0dc-49ef-b711-974ba1c978df
Dalenbäck, Jan-Olof
df8e6769-aecb-46f7-94f3-79df3c1b37f7
Ekberg, Lars
ff06053f-1dd0-4fbd-ac82-1663e3356a6e
Teli, Despoina, Dalenbäck, Jan-Olof and Ekberg, Lars
(2016)
Winter thermal comfort and indoor air quality in Swedish grade school classrooms, as assessed by the children.
Indoor Air 2016: 14th International Conference of Indoor Air Quality and Climate, Ghent, Belgium.
03 - 08 Jul 2016.
10 pp
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
This paper presents results from a pilot thermal comfort study in five Swedish grade school classrooms in three different buildings during winter 2015/16. The study includes measurements of environmental parameters (air temperature, globe temperature, relative humidity, air speed, CO2) and questionnaire surveys designed to match the children’s cognitive level. The questionnaire includes questions about thermal perception, air quality and air movement, as well as the children’s clothing level. The aim of this study is to investigate whether recently found differences in thermal sensation between children and adults outside the heating season also apply to the winter season. Children’s assessment is compared to the objective measurements during the surveys, to winter design criteria for school classrooms and to comfort temperatures from previous studies. The results agree with the previously found warmer sensation of children compared to adults’ predicted thermal sensation based on the currently used PMV model, although this time the difference is smaller. Regarding air quality, no relationship was found between children’s assessment and CO2 levels.
Text
IA2016_607_Teli_Camera-ready.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 July 2016
Published date: July 2016
Venue - Dates:
Indoor Air 2016: 14th International Conference of Indoor Air Quality and Climate, Ghent, Belgium, 2016-07-03 - 2016-07-08
Organisations:
Energy & Climate Change Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 397957
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/397957
PURE UUID: 1d261d85-6e97-4d52-a779-6f7af8af14f7
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Date deposited: 13 Jul 2016 10:55
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 01:25
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Contributors
Author:
Jan-Olof Dalenbäck
Author:
Lars Ekberg
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