Investigation of Indoor Thermal Perceptions and Comfort Temperature in Educational Spaces in Qatar
Author | Indraganti, Madhavi |
Available date | 2023-08-21T09:51:21Z |
Publication Date | 2023-02 |
Publication Name | The 2nd International Conference on Civil Infrastructure and Construction (CIC 2023) |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.29117/cic.2023.0122 |
Citation | Indraganti M., “Investigation of Indoor Thermal Perceptions and Comfort Temperature in Educational Spaces in Qatar”, The 2nd International Conference on Civil Infrastructure and Construction (CIC 2023), Doha, Qatar, 5-8 February 2023, DOI: https://doi.org/10.29117/cic.2023.0122 |
ISSN | 2958-3128 |
Abstract | We conducted thermal comfort field surveys in female educational spaces in Qatar in the autumn and winter of 2018 and 2020 – 21 and collected 324 datasets. They contained all the four environmental measurements and simultaneous thermal responses of female university students dressed in traditional Islamic clothing consisting of headgears and full-body cloaks (abayas) (mean clothing: 1.21 clo). Exacerbating the occupant discomfort, classrooms are overcooled/overheated in autumn/winter, respectively. About 89.9% respondents had no access to indoor temperature control and 43.5% had no access to any environmental controls. We evaluated the mean indoor comfort temperature as 22.9 (3.1) ˚C. In 64.2% cases, it did not conform to the comfort zone in international standards. We noted significant seasonal differences in indoor environments. Air speed was zero most of the time. Only 53.8% felt comfortable thermal sensations, and 66% accepted the environments, as against 80% in the international standards. The predicted mean vote (PMV) was significantly inaccurate up to three scale points and in 86.4% cases PMV mis-predicted by half a scale point or more. Therefore, framing the narrative around user-controlled air movement and indoor controls is necessary, so that indoor temperature can be effectively increased in autumn and lowered in winter. |
Sponsor | Qatar National Research Fund and Qatar University (Grant: UREP25-040-2-018 and Grant: QUST-2-CENG-2018-8). |
Language | en |
Publisher | Qatar University Press |
Subject | Adaptive comfort Comfort temperature Field study Hot climates Buildings |
Type | Conference Paper |
Pagination | 952-961 |
ESSN | 2958-3136 |
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Architecture & Urban Planning [305 items ]
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Theme 3: Sustainable Architecture and Urban Planning for Society Wellbeing [32 items ]