Abstract
To understand how transition across different thermal zones in a building impacts the thermal perception of occupants, the current work examines occupant feedback in two work environments — nursing staff in hospital wards and the workers in an office. Both studies used a mix of subjective surveys and objective measurements. A total of 96 responses were collected from the hospital wards while 142 were collected from the office. The thermal environment in the hospital wards was perceived as slightly warm on the ASHRAE thermal sensation scale (mean TSV = 1.2), while the office workers rated their environment on the cool side (mean TSV = −0.15). The results also show that when the transitions were across temperature differences within ±2 °C, the thermal perception was not impacted by the magnitude of the temperature difference — as reflected in occupant thermal sensation and thermal comfort/thermal acceptability vote. This would imply that the effect of temperature steps on thermal perception, if any, within these boundaries, was extremely short lived. These findings go towards establishing the feasibility of heterogeneous indoor thermal environments and thermal zoning of workspaces for human comfort.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 402-411 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Journal | Building and Environment |
| Volume | 144 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 15 Oct 2018 |
Funding
Cooperation of all the participants is acknowledged gratefully. Our thanks to Wout van Bommel, from Unit Building Physics and Services laboratory, and to Harold Weffers, and Rene Leenaars for their help with the field measurements. A K Mishra was supported for part of this work's duration by the Dutch Technology Foundation STW (under project nr. 11854 ), which is part of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), which is partially funded by the Ministry of Economic Affairs. Appendix A
Keywords
- Field study
- Hospitals
- Indoor transition
- Office space
- Thermal comfort
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