An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007
Daylighting has a recognized potential for electric energy savings when is used as a complement for artificial lighting. This study reviews the comprehensive calculation method for lighting energy requirement in non-residential buildings introduced by the European Standard EN 15193: 2007 and investi...
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doaj-f524757bbfe649abb4a6343a1ff69d972020-11-25T03:36:04ZengSolarLitsJournal of Daylighting2383-87012014-12-0111162810.15627/jd.2014.3An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007Meng Tian0Yuehong Su1Institute of Sustainable Energy Technology, Department of Architecture and Built Environment, University of Nottingham, University Park, NG7 2RD, UK.Institute of Sustainable Energy Technology, Department of Architecture and Built Environment, University of Nottingham, University Park, NG7 2RD, UK.Daylighting has a recognized potential for electric energy savings when is used as a complement for artificial lighting. This study reviews the comprehensive calculation method for lighting energy requirement in non-residential buildings introduced by the European Standard EN 15193: 2007 and investigates its feasibility in China. The location of building influences the intensity and duration of daylight. In EN 15193 calculation method, the daylight supply factor, which represents the effect of daylighting on usage of artificial lighting, is the only factor related to location and calculated according to latitude, however the current method (EN15193: 2007) limits the latitude range from 38° to 60° north in Europe, for which the relationship between daylight supply factor and latitude is approximately linear. This study shows that a quadratic relationship needs to be used for a wider range of latitudes. The coefficients of the proposed quadratic relationship are determined for the classified daylight penetration and maintained illuminance level. Various control types are also considered. Prediction of energy requirement for lighting is obtained through building simulation tool EnergyPlus and the effects of some setting factors are discussed.http://solarlits.com/jd/1-16.htmlDaylightingDaylight supply factorDaylight penetrationIlluminance level |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Meng Tian Yuehong Su |
spellingShingle |
Meng Tian Yuehong Su An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 Journal of Daylighting Daylighting Daylight supply factor Daylight penetration Illuminance level |
author_facet |
Meng Tian Yuehong Su |
author_sort |
Meng Tian |
title |
An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 |
title_short |
An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 |
title_full |
An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 |
title_fullStr |
An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Improvement to Calculation of Lighting Energy Requirement in the European Standard EN 15193:2007 |
title_sort |
improvement to calculation of lighting energy requirement in the european standard en 15193:2007 |
publisher |
SolarLits |
series |
Journal of Daylighting |
issn |
2383-8701 |
publishDate |
2014-12-01 |
description |
Daylighting has a recognized potential for electric energy savings when is used as a complement for artificial lighting. This study reviews the comprehensive calculation method for lighting energy requirement in non-residential buildings introduced by the European Standard EN 15193: 2007 and investigates its feasibility in China. The location of building influences the intensity and duration of daylight. In EN 15193 calculation method, the daylight supply factor, which represents the effect of daylighting on usage of artificial lighting, is the only factor related to location and calculated according to latitude, however the current method (EN15193: 2007) limits the latitude range from 38° to 60° north in Europe, for which the relationship between daylight supply factor and latitude is approximately linear. This study shows that a quadratic relationship needs to be used for a wider range of latitudes. The coefficients of the proposed quadratic relationship are determined for the classified daylight penetration and maintained illuminance level. Various control types are also considered. Prediction of energy requirement for lighting is obtained through building simulation tool EnergyPlus and the effects of some setting factors are discussed. |
topic |
Daylighting Daylight supply factor Daylight penetration Illuminance level |
url |
http://solarlits.com/jd/1-16.html |
work_keys_str_mv |
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