A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies

Active daylight harvesting technologies that are currently available in the market have often suffered from wide-spread market acceptability due to their high cost and imperfect performance. Passive systems, though simple and affordable, typically cannot harvest higher potentials of daylight, which...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Javed, Shamim
Other Authors: Environmental Design and Planning
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49245
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-49245
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-492452020-09-29T05:31:51Z A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies Javed, Shamim Environmental Design and Planning Reichard, Georg Beliveau, Yvan J. Schubert, Robert P. McGinnis, Sean Light Shelf Daylight Harvesting Framework Development Active daylight harvesting technologies that are currently available in the market have often suffered from wide-spread market acceptability due to their high cost and imperfect performance. Passive systems, though simple and affordable, typically cannot harvest higher potentials of daylight, which is dynamic over days, months, and seasons, due to their static nature. There is a research and market gap that calls for investigation towards the development of low-tech, manually adjustable, high-performance daylighting mechanisms to be used as an alternative to active daylighting solutions, which are often controlled by building automation systems. This research proposes a framework to support the development of daylight harvesting mechanisms, which will allow for low-tech yet temporary adjustable systems, merging some of the advantages of active systems with passive ones. The hybrid of the above two categories will be a manually adjustable light harvesting device that will allow for quick adjustment through mechanical means to few predefined positions. These positions will be customized to each location to achieve optimum daylight harvesting. The resulting device will allow for flexible adjustment to daily and seasonal variations of the sun's path, while retaining a level of simplicity and elegance towards low-cost installation and operation. Significant effort was made in the initial phase of this research to use experimental studies as the primary method of investigation. However, given the nature of daylight and practical constraints in the field, the experimental method was found to be not productive enough for extent of this research. As a result, simulation studies were ultimately used to generate the necessary data for the development of this framework. For the simulation phase 'DIVA4Rhino,' a climate-based daylighting software and 'Grasshopper,' a graphical programming tool for Rhino, was used to first construct a parametric simulation loop. Next, a reduced set of parameters for a manually adjustable light shelf system were tested for daylight performance, as a 'proof of concept'. Finally, based on the previous two steps, a framework to help the development of manually adjustable light shelf systems has been defined. This research shows that light shelves, even when kept fixed at a single optimum configuration for the whole year, can increase interior daylight performance in most locations and orientations. It also shows that indoor daylight harvesting can be further enhanced if the light shelf is manually adjusted on a seasonal basis. Amongst the variations tested, rotational adjustability has been found to contribute most to the increase in performance. Segmented adjustability, e.g. where the inner and outer sections of a light shelf are manipulated separately, was found to extend performance of light shelves even further though not by significant amounts. Ph. D. 2014-07-01T08:00:25Z 2014-07-01T08:00:25Z 2014-06-30 Dissertation vt_gsexam:3218 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49245 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Light Shelf
Daylight Harvesting
Framework Development
spellingShingle Light Shelf
Daylight Harvesting
Framework Development
Javed, Shamim
A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
description Active daylight harvesting technologies that are currently available in the market have often suffered from wide-spread market acceptability due to their high cost and imperfect performance. Passive systems, though simple and affordable, typically cannot harvest higher potentials of daylight, which is dynamic over days, months, and seasons, due to their static nature. There is a research and market gap that calls for investigation towards the development of low-tech, manually adjustable, high-performance daylighting mechanisms to be used as an alternative to active daylighting solutions, which are often controlled by building automation systems. This research proposes a framework to support the development of daylight harvesting mechanisms, which will allow for low-tech yet temporary adjustable systems, merging some of the advantages of active systems with passive ones. The hybrid of the above two categories will be a manually adjustable light harvesting device that will allow for quick adjustment through mechanical means to few predefined positions. These positions will be customized to each location to achieve optimum daylight harvesting. The resulting device will allow for flexible adjustment to daily and seasonal variations of the sun's path, while retaining a level of simplicity and elegance towards low-cost installation and operation. Significant effort was made in the initial phase of this research to use experimental studies as the primary method of investigation. However, given the nature of daylight and practical constraints in the field, the experimental method was found to be not productive enough for extent of this research. As a result, simulation studies were ultimately used to generate the necessary data for the development of this framework. For the simulation phase 'DIVA4Rhino,' a climate-based daylighting software and 'Grasshopper,' a graphical programming tool for Rhino, was used to first construct a parametric simulation loop. Next, a reduced set of parameters for a manually adjustable light shelf system were tested for daylight performance, as a 'proof of concept'. Finally, based on the previous two steps, a framework to help the development of manually adjustable light shelf systems has been defined. This research shows that light shelves, even when kept fixed at a single optimum configuration for the whole year, can increase interior daylight performance in most locations and orientations. It also shows that indoor daylight harvesting can be further enhanced if the light shelf is manually adjusted on a seasonal basis. Amongst the variations tested, rotational adjustability has been found to contribute most to the increase in performance. Segmented adjustability, e.g. where the inner and outer sections of a light shelf are manipulated separately, was found to extend performance of light shelves even further though not by significant amounts. === Ph. D.
author2 Environmental Design and Planning
author_facet Environmental Design and Planning
Javed, Shamim
author Javed, Shamim
author_sort Javed, Shamim
title A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
title_short A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
title_full A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
title_fullStr A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
title_full_unstemmed A Framework to Support the Development of Manually Adjustable Light Shelf Technologies
title_sort framework to support the development of manually adjustable light shelf technologies
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49245
work_keys_str_mv AT javedshamim aframeworktosupportthedevelopmentofmanuallyadjustablelightshelftechnologies
AT javedshamim frameworktosupportthedevelopmentofmanuallyadjustablelightshelftechnologies
_version_ 1719343376251224064