The importance of sample grouping; exploring thermal sensitivity of occupants within one building type and ventilation mode
The importance of sample grouping; exploring thermal sensitivity of occupants within one building type and ventilation mode
Occupants’ thermal response is influenced by their sensitivity to temperature variations, i.e. the rate of change in occupants’ thermal sensation per unit change in indoor temperature. Thermal sensitivity is commonly taken as constant (Griffiths constant) in the calculation of occupants’ comfort temperature. This constant is based on small differences found between buildings’ ventilation modes [naturally ventilated (NV) vs. air conditioned (AC)]. However, recent research found significant differences depending on building type, ventilation mode, age, gender and climate. This paper reviews thermal sensitivity within the same building type and main ventilation mode using longitudinal surveys and monitoring data from school buildings, two in the UK (U1 and U2) and one in Sweden (S1). Results show that in two of the schools (U1 and S1) children were half as sensitive as in school U2 and the difference is statistically significant. A similar result with slightly different thermal sensitivities was derived from comparison by clusters derived from the classrooms’ indoor temperatures. This outcome suggests that building ventilation mode (AC/NV), which is typically considered the main determinant of occupants’ thermal experience and often the only building information recorded in field surveys, is inadequate to explain this important occupant response factor.
thermal sensitivity, indoor temperature, thermal comfort, ventilation mode, buildings
1-11
Teli, Despoina
197175f8-1a63-4b6a-b527-3762a84e3acc
Gauthier, Stephanie
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
16 April 2020
Teli, Despoina
197175f8-1a63-4b6a-b527-3762a84e3acc
Gauthier, Stephanie
4e7702f7-e1a9-4732-8430-fabbed0f56ed
Teli, Despoina and Gauthier, Stephanie
(2020)
The importance of sample grouping; exploring thermal sensitivity of occupants within one building type and ventilation mode.
Susan, Roaf, Nicol, Fergus and Finlayson, William
(eds.)
In Proceedings of the 11th Windsor Conference: Resilient Comfort. 16th to 19th April 2020, Windsor, UK.: NCEUB.
The Windsor Conference.
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Occupants’ thermal response is influenced by their sensitivity to temperature variations, i.e. the rate of change in occupants’ thermal sensation per unit change in indoor temperature. Thermal sensitivity is commonly taken as constant (Griffiths constant) in the calculation of occupants’ comfort temperature. This constant is based on small differences found between buildings’ ventilation modes [naturally ventilated (NV) vs. air conditioned (AC)]. However, recent research found significant differences depending on building type, ventilation mode, age, gender and climate. This paper reviews thermal sensitivity within the same building type and main ventilation mode using longitudinal surveys and monitoring data from school buildings, two in the UK (U1 and U2) and one in Sweden (S1). Results show that in two of the schools (U1 and S1) children were half as sensitive as in school U2 and the difference is statistically significant. A similar result with slightly different thermal sensitivities was derived from comparison by clusters derived from the classrooms’ indoor temperatures. This outcome suggests that building ventilation mode (AC/NV), which is typically considered the main determinant of occupants’ thermal experience and often the only building information recorded in field surveys, is inadequate to explain this important occupant response factor.
Text
WINDSOR 2020_Teli_Gauthier_final
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More information
Published date: 16 April 2020
Venue - Dates:
11th Windsor Conference: Resilient Comfort, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor, United Kingdom, 2020-04-16 - 2020-04-19
Keywords:
thermal sensitivity, indoor temperature, thermal comfort, ventilation mode, buildings
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 446289
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/446289
PURE UUID: b08a7d80-09a2-4073-b3ff-cbb4a42961fc
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Date deposited: 03 Feb 2021 17:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:38
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Contributors
Author:
Despoina Teli
Editor:
Roaf Susan
Editor:
Fergus Nicol
Editor:
William Finlayson
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