Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling

An increasing part of modern building's energy demand is due to cooling. An ongoing research project investigates the possibility to reduce the energy consumption from cooling by utilizing an individually controlled active ventilation diffuser mounted in the ceiling. This study looks at thermal...

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Main Authors: Solberg Håkon, Thunshelle Kari, Schild Peter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2020-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_06001.pdf
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spelling doaj-3cd0aa5f6f2e46778d3f058f891536c12021-04-02T14:31:09ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422020-01-011720600110.1051/e3sconf/202017206001e3sconf_nsb2020_06001Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual coolingSolberg Håkon0Thunshelle Kari1Schild PeterSINTEF CommunitySINTEF CommunityAn increasing part of modern building's energy demand is due to cooling. An ongoing research project investigates the possibility to reduce the energy consumption from cooling by utilizing an individually controlled active ventilation diffuser mounted in the ceiling. This study looks at thermal sensation and thermal comfort for 21 test persons exposed to an innovative user controlled active ventilation valve, in a steady and thermally uniform climate chamber. Furthermore, the relationship between biometric data from the test persons skin temperature and sweat, and the test persons thermal sensation scores has been investigated. Each test person was exposed to three different room temperatures in the climate chamber, 24°C, 26°C and 28°C respectively, to simulate typical hot summer conditions in an office in Norway. At a room temperature of 26°C it was possible to achieve acceptable thermal comfort for most test persons with this solution, but higher air velocity than 0.75 m/s around the test persons bodies at room temperatures of 28°C is required to ensure satisfactory thermal comfort.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_06001.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Solberg Håkon
Thunshelle Kari
Schild Peter
spellingShingle Solberg Håkon
Thunshelle Kari
Schild Peter
Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Solberg Håkon
Thunshelle Kari
Schild Peter
author_sort Solberg Håkon
title Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
title_short Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
title_full Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
title_fullStr Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
title_full_unstemmed Thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
title_sort thermal comfort, thermal sensation and skin temperature measurements using demand-controlled ventilation for individual cooling
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2020-01-01
description An increasing part of modern building's energy demand is due to cooling. An ongoing research project investigates the possibility to reduce the energy consumption from cooling by utilizing an individually controlled active ventilation diffuser mounted in the ceiling. This study looks at thermal sensation and thermal comfort for 21 test persons exposed to an innovative user controlled active ventilation valve, in a steady and thermally uniform climate chamber. Furthermore, the relationship between biometric data from the test persons skin temperature and sweat, and the test persons thermal sensation scores has been investigated. Each test person was exposed to three different room temperatures in the climate chamber, 24°C, 26°C and 28°C respectively, to simulate typical hot summer conditions in an office in Norway. At a room temperature of 26°C it was possible to achieve acceptable thermal comfort for most test persons with this solution, but higher air velocity than 0.75 m/s around the test persons bodies at room temperatures of 28°C is required to ensure satisfactory thermal comfort.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2020/32/e3sconf_nsb2020_06001.pdf
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AT thunshellekari thermalcomfortthermalsensationandskintemperaturemeasurementsusingdemandcontrolledventilationforindividualcooling
AT schildpeter thermalcomfortthermalsensationandskintemperaturemeasurementsusingdemandcontrolledventilationforindividualcooling
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