Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings
How road surfaces reflect light in space is a physical characteristic that plays a key role in the design of road lighting installations: by European Standards the average luminance is the target quantity to assure the required safety conditions of the motorized road traffic. Lighting systems are de...
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doaj-9e56a42dbd7b4edba61baeefd03edb192020-11-25T01:36:36ZengMDPI AGCoatings2079-64122019-04-019528610.3390/coatings9050286coatings9050286Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy SavingsHenrik Gidlund0Mikael Lindgren1Valerie Muzet2Giuseppe Rossi3Paola Iacomussi4Trafikverket, 17290 Sundbyberg, SwedenResearch Institutes of Sweden (RISE), 50115 Borås, SwedenProject-Team ENDSUM (Non Destructive Evaluation of StrUctures and Materials), CEREMA, 67035 Strasbourg, FranceIstituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRIM), 10135 Torino, ItalyIstituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRIM), 10135 Torino, ItalyHow road surfaces reflect light in space is a physical characteristic that plays a key role in the design of road lighting installations: by European Standards the average luminance is the target quantity to assure the required safety conditions of the motorized road traffic. Lighting systems are designed (luminous flux installed per kilometre) to comply with the above requirement, starting from reference values of road surfaces reflection published in an old scientific document. These data are obsolete and not representative of current road surfaces, but they are still used to design current LED lighting systems. European Community funded a SURFACE project to provide to EU standard organization new traceable reference data, representative of current road surfaces used in EU. The paper presents the data collections and the impact on road lighting of using available old reference data versus SURFACE collected data of current road surfaces. Results highlight advantages in using bright pavements as well the need for introducing systems for flux control in road lighting installation to compensate for the discrepancies between current reference data and actual road surface data.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/9/5/286road surfaceluminance coefficient <i>q</i>road lightingenergy savingsroad users safetyEMPIREURAMETSurface 16NRM02 project |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Henrik Gidlund Mikael Lindgren Valerie Muzet Giuseppe Rossi Paola Iacomussi |
spellingShingle |
Henrik Gidlund Mikael Lindgren Valerie Muzet Giuseppe Rossi Paola Iacomussi Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings Coatings road surface luminance coefficient <i>q</i> road lighting energy savings road users safety EMPIR EURAMET Surface 16NRM02 project |
author_facet |
Henrik Gidlund Mikael Lindgren Valerie Muzet Giuseppe Rossi Paola Iacomussi |
author_sort |
Henrik Gidlund |
title |
Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings |
title_short |
Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings |
title_full |
Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings |
title_fullStr |
Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings |
title_full_unstemmed |
Road Surface Photometric Characterisation and Its Impact on Energy Savings |
title_sort |
road surface photometric characterisation and its impact on energy savings |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Coatings |
issn |
2079-6412 |
publishDate |
2019-04-01 |
description |
How road surfaces reflect light in space is a physical characteristic that plays a key role in the design of road lighting installations: by European Standards the average luminance is the target quantity to assure the required safety conditions of the motorized road traffic. Lighting systems are designed (luminous flux installed per kilometre) to comply with the above requirement, starting from reference values of road surfaces reflection published in an old scientific document. These data are obsolete and not representative of current road surfaces, but they are still used to design current LED lighting systems. European Community funded a SURFACE project to provide to EU standard organization new traceable reference data, representative of current road surfaces used in EU. The paper presents the data collections and the impact on road lighting of using available old reference data versus SURFACE collected data of current road surfaces. Results highlight advantages in using bright pavements as well the need for introducing systems for flux control in road lighting installation to compensate for the discrepancies between current reference data and actual road surface data. |
topic |
road surface luminance coefficient <i>q</i> road lighting energy savings road users safety EMPIR EURAMET Surface 16NRM02 project |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/9/5/286 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT henrikgidlund roadsurfacephotometriccharacterisationanditsimpactonenergysavings AT mikaellindgren roadsurfacephotometriccharacterisationanditsimpactonenergysavings AT valeriemuzet roadsurfacephotometriccharacterisationanditsimpactonenergysavings AT giusepperossi roadsurfacephotometriccharacterisationanditsimpactonenergysavings AT paolaiacomussi roadsurfacephotometriccharacterisationanditsimpactonenergysavings |
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1725062073844498432 |