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A Wireless Indoor Environmental Quality Logger Processing the Indoor Global Comfort Index

Stefano Riffelli

2022Sensors16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Indoor environmental quality (IEQ) has a high-level of impact on one’s health and productivity. It is widely accepted that IEQ is composed of four categories: thermal comfort, indoor air quality (IAQ), visual comfort, and acoustic comfort. The main physical parameters that primarily represent these comfort categories can be monitored using sensors. To this purpose, the article proposes a wireless indoor environmental quality logger. In the literature, global comfort indices are often assessed objectively (using sensors) or subjectively (through surveys). This study adopts an integrated approach that calculates a predicted indoor global comfort index (P-IGCI) using sensor data and estimates a real perceived indoor global comfort index (RP-IGCI) based on questionnaires. Among the 19 different tested algorithms, the stepwise multiple linear regression model minimized the distance between the two comfort indices. In the case study involving a university classroom setting—thermal comfort and indoor air quality were identified as the most relevant IEQ elements from a subjective point of view. The model also confirms this findings from an objective perspective since temperature and CO2 merge as the measured physical parameters with the most impacts on overall comfort.

Topics & Concepts

Thermal comfortIndoor air qualityEnvironmental qualityMerge (version control)Environmental scienceComputer scienceAir quality indexArchitectural engineeringSimulationEngineeringMeteorologyEnvironmental engineeringGeographyLawPolitical scienceInformation retrievalBuilding Energy and Comfort OptimizationUrban Heat Island MitigationNoise Effects and Management
A Wireless Indoor Environmental Quality Logger Processing the Indoor Global Comfort Index | Litcius