scholarly journals Indoor environmental quality evaluation in a hot and arid climate: a case study of a higher education office building

2020 ◽  
Vol 167 ◽  
pp. 04004
Author(s):  
Yasmin Abdou ◽  
Young Ki Kim ◽  
Lindita Bande

Indoor Environment Quality (IEQ) refers to the overall environmental quality within a building, especially as it relates to the health and comfort of the building’s occupants. It includes several factors such as lighting levels and indoor air quality (IAQ). As humans spend a significant amount of time indoors; particularly at the workplace for up to 12 hours a day, the IEQ of the office greatly affects one’s overall well-being, health with striking effects on productivity. As for IAQ, in severe cases, high levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), particulate matter (PM), and humidity may cause headache, allergy, and asthma. A higher education (HE) office building located in United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) campus has been taken as a case study. Situated in the UAE, this is characterized by an extremely hot-arid climate. The HE building has been monitored using a set of advanced sensor devices to record indoor environmental data such as the measurements of temperature, relative humidity, lux level, particulate matter 2.5/10(PM 2.5/ 10), carbon dioxide (CO2), and total volatile organic compounds (TVOCs). Results of this paper aim to use the onsite numerical assessment and future POE assessment to verify the building’s performance and discover where the operational gaps are. Better facility management strategies will be suggested to enhance the indoor environmental quality (IEQ) as well as more findings will be discussed in this paper.

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 120
Author(s):  
Eunsil Lee

Despite the rapid growth in the number of LEED-certified homes, little data is currently available about the actual effects of LEED-certified affordable homes. The purpose of present study is to conduct a comprehensive performance evaluation for LEED-certified Habitat for Humanity residences in terms of (1) energy efficiency, (2) indoor environmental quality, (3) health impact, (4) residential satisfaction, (5) quality of life, and (6) environmental attitudes and behaviors. A case study was conducted with 15 households living in LEED-certified Habitat for Humanity homes in Kent County, Michigan using observation, in-depth interviews, and surveys. Findings revealed overall housing satisfaction was very high although some residents indicated lower satisfaction with their neighborhood. Most of case study homes had 30-50% lower electricity and natural gas bills. Most participants were satisfied with indoor environmental quality (IEQ) including thermal comfort, indoor air quality, amount daylight, quality of artificial lighting, and acoustical condition. Most participants agreed that since moving into their current homes they have experienced improved family relationships, better health conditions, more positive attitudes, and better performance of their children. The major findings of this case study support the positive effects of LEED-certified low-income homes on residents’ behavioral, social, and psychological aspects of well-being.


Facilities ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 88-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young S. Lee

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to identify different indoor environmental quality (IEQ) criteria affecting performance, health, and well-being of library user groups in higher education. The study investigated the differences in significant IEQ criteria affecting the performance, health, and well-being among the library user groups conducting certain types of collaborative activities. The aim was to was to find the significant IEQ criteria particular to each group conducting certain types of collaborative activities. Design/methodology/approach – Four types of collaborative activities were categorized based on the organizational knowledge creation theory in the knowledge management field. A total of ten IEQ criteria affecting performance, health, and well-being were identified based on a literature review of other studies and existing instruments. A survey was conducted via online with library users in a higher education library on the east coast of the USA. Responses from a total of 421 students were analyzed by descriptive statistics and analysis of variance statistics. Findings – The results indicated that the group conducting only individual focused work and socializing in a group showed statistically lower significance in acoustics, privacy, and ergonomics furniture than one or more of the other groups. The group conducting all four collaborative activities exhibited statistically higher significance in ergonomic furniture and aesthetics than one or more of the other groups. Originality/value – The study provides a comprehensive framework to be used in occupant survey to measure occupant performance, health, and well-being. It also offers practical implications for enhancing particular IEQ criteria for each library user group conducting certain types of collaborative activities in the academic library of higher education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 01-18
Author(s):  
Mohammad Ayad Al-Rawi ◽  
Praneel Chand ◽  
Archie Van Mendoza Evangelista

Poor indoor environmental quality (IEQ) has become a global concern for World Health Organization (WHO), and its impact on health and well-being has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. To monitor and sanitize indoor air, this study develops a cost-effective and customizable IEQ monitoring system to detect unhealthy and low-comfort air levels. This system uses ThingSpeak (MATLAB), microcontrollers (Arduino Uno), and various low-cost sensors to measure indoor air quality (IAQ) and IEQ in terms of gas, particulate matter, temperature, sound level, and ultraviolet (UV) light. The presented system is validated with respect to temperature, relative humidity, and particulate matter by benchmarking against the Camfil air image sensor manufactured by Camfil AB, Stockholm, Sweden. The average error of temperature, relative humidity, and PM2.5 are 0.55%, 5.13%, and 3.45%, respectively.


Buildings ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Stenson ◽  
Suzanne L. Ishaq ◽  
Aurélie Laguerre ◽  
Andrew Loia ◽  
Georgia MacCrone ◽  
...  

A broad range of building performance monitoring, sampling, and evaluation was conducted periodically after construction and spanning more than a year, for an occupied office building constructed using mass timber elements such as cross-laminated timber (CLT) floor and roof panels, as well as glue-laminated timber (GLT) beams and columns. This case study contributes research on monitoring indoor environmental quality in buildings, describing one of the few studies of an occupied mass timber building, and analyzing data in three areas that impact occupant experience: indoor air quality, bacterial community composition, and floor vibration. As a whole, the building was found to perform well. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including formaldehyde, were analyzed using multiple methods. Formaldehyde was found to be present in the building, though levels were below most recommended exposure limits. The source of formaldehyde was not able to be identified in this study. The richness of the bacterial community was affected by the height of sampling with respect to the floor, and richness and composition was affected by the location within the building. Floor vibration was observed to be below recognized human comfort thresholds.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tania Rus ◽  
Dorin Beu ◽  
Calin Ciugudeanu

"The indoor environment quality is a key factor in people's lives, which directly affects their comfort, performance, health and well-being. The main factors that contribute to the indoor environmental quality are thermal comfort, air and lighting quality and acoustics. This study aims to extend the current knowledge on the impact of IEQ on students’ performance. Field measurements on environmental factors were performed in two similar classrooms, with the same number of students engaged in a written examination. Compliance of the indoor environmental parameters with the current standards regulations was performed. Students’ performance was quantified by their exam grades. The results of the field measurements show that, in both classrooms, the acoustics and air quality do not fulfil the standard regulations, especially in the case of carbon dioxide concentration which exceeds a lot the threshold limit of 1000 ppm. The outcomes of the study also reveal that in the classroom where the concentration of carbon dioxide is higher, the students scored lower grades, therefore we can conclude that indoor environmental quality has an impact on students’ performance."


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aniebietabasi Ackley

<p>This thesis introduces a methodological approach for assessing Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) at an unprecedented scale in a large property portfolio to identify good and poor IEQ in buildings to inform design, asset management, maintenance, and evidence-based policy decisions. There is clear evidence that with deteriorating IEQ conditions, there is a decrease in human performance and their acceptability of the indoor environment. This thesis initially sought to find precedents for the influence of combined IEQ (lighting, temperature, relative humidity, acoustics, and indoor air quality) measurements on learning performance in schools and found none. No standards for measuring or characterizing this all inclusive IEQ in classrooms was found. In previous IEQ studies, there is no coherent guidance on representative placement of sensors (data loggers) and height to place a multi-variable sensor within a space. </p> <p>The primary purpose of this thesis was to ascertain whether a one-point sensor measurement could be representative of the environmental condition across a space and where might be the best location to measure IEQ in many classrooms. Using the New Zealand Ministry of Education portfolio as a case study, physical measurements and observations were carried out in three typical case study classrooms, in three selected schools in Wellington. An array of sensors that simultaneously measures all five IEQ variables in a single device were deployed on the vertical walls and on the horizontal measuring plane in the case study classrooms during non-school days and school days in summer, autumn, and spring. One external sensor was positioned outside the classroom in a shaded walkway to monitor external environmental data and external weather data was also retrieved from the closet weather station. </p> <p>The main conclusion is that for all five environmental variables, the relationship between the central horizontal plane and vertical wall sensors was consistent for approximately 80% of the time. This indicated that a vertical wall sensor can reliably predict IEQ levels at the centre of a classroom. This study concludes that a one-point sensor located on an unglazed vertical wall, where the sun is unlikely to shine and away from any sources of heat can strongly predict IEQ at the most frequently occupied parts of a space (the centre). </p> <p>A one-point measurement provides an indication of what is happening in a room, but not necessarily all the variations (differences) across the room. The use of a one-point sensor gives a general indication of IEQ trends and patterns. It can suggest that IEQ highs are way too high or the lows way too low, or the range of extremes are too broad. It cannot pinpoint problem causes, or specific local issues, but is useful to triage good and poor IEQ in classrooms for early discrimination from hundreds or more classrooms of how to direct the maintenance or refurbishment programmes for large groups of school buildings. An additional level of information could be picked up better by using multiple sensors, building modelling or in combination with other qualitative methods such as survey of occupants. These findings can be used by researchers, architects, building scientist and policymakers to diagnose building performance in a national school property portfolio. The same process could be used in any large property portfolio to prioritize remediation works. </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aniebietabasi Ackley

<p>This thesis introduces a methodological approach for assessing Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) at an unprecedented scale in a large property portfolio to identify good and poor IEQ in buildings to inform design, asset management, maintenance, and evidence-based policy decisions. There is clear evidence that with deteriorating IEQ conditions, there is a decrease in human performance and their acceptability of the indoor environment. This thesis initially sought to find precedents for the influence of combined IEQ (lighting, temperature, relative humidity, acoustics, and indoor air quality) measurements on learning performance in schools and found none. No standards for measuring or characterizing this all inclusive IEQ in classrooms was found. In previous IEQ studies, there is no coherent guidance on representative placement of sensors (data loggers) and height to place a multi-variable sensor within a space. </p> <p>The primary purpose of this thesis was to ascertain whether a one-point sensor measurement could be representative of the environmental condition across a space and where might be the best location to measure IEQ in many classrooms. Using the New Zealand Ministry of Education portfolio as a case study, physical measurements and observations were carried out in three typical case study classrooms, in three selected schools in Wellington. An array of sensors that simultaneously measures all five IEQ variables in a single device were deployed on the vertical walls and on the horizontal measuring plane in the case study classrooms during non-school days and school days in summer, autumn, and spring. One external sensor was positioned outside the classroom in a shaded walkway to monitor external environmental data and external weather data was also retrieved from the closet weather station. </p> <p>The main conclusion is that for all five environmental variables, the relationship between the central horizontal plane and vertical wall sensors was consistent for approximately 80% of the time. This indicated that a vertical wall sensor can reliably predict IEQ levels at the centre of a classroom. This study concludes that a one-point sensor located on an unglazed vertical wall, where the sun is unlikely to shine and away from any sources of heat can strongly predict IEQ at the most frequently occupied parts of a space (the centre). </p> <p>A one-point measurement provides an indication of what is happening in a room, but not necessarily all the variations (differences) across the room. The use of a one-point sensor gives a general indication of IEQ trends and patterns. It can suggest that IEQ highs are way too high or the lows way too low, or the range of extremes are too broad. It cannot pinpoint problem causes, or specific local issues, but is useful to triage good and poor IEQ in classrooms for early discrimination from hundreds or more classrooms of how to direct the maintenance or refurbishment programmes for large groups of school buildings. An additional level of information could be picked up better by using multiple sensors, building modelling or in combination with other qualitative methods such as survey of occupants. These findings can be used by researchers, architects, building scientist and policymakers to diagnose building performance in a national school property portfolio. The same process could be used in any large property portfolio to prioritize remediation works. </p>


Measurement ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 110061
Author(s):  
Sneha Gautam ◽  
Cyril Sammuel ◽  
Aniket Bhardwaj ◽  
Zahra Shams Esfandabadi ◽  
M. Santosh ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ang Qiu Mei ◽  
Md Azree Othuman Mydin

This study was done to investigate the relationship between indoor environmental quality and prevalence of Sick Building Syndrome in six small offices inPenangIsland. Indoor environmental quality measurement was conducted according to relevant standards. There are totally Sixty workers were selected to participate in an electronic questionnaire survey. Questionnaire was used to record the comfort level of respondents in the case studies and level of sick building syndrome faced by respondents. Through indoor environmental quality measurement, it is found that most of the offices facing the lighting and noise problem. The result from the questionnaire shows that in overall, the occupants satisfy with their working environment in term of indoor environmental quality although the result also shows the opinions of occupants on dissatisfaction on certain indoor environmental parameter according to case study. The study also found that most of the occupants feel drowsy and fatigue when they work within the offices. Besides, due to the difference of the indoor environmental quality of the buildings, the occupants are suffered from different symptoms of the sick building syndrome.


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