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Effect of Office Design Characteristics and Anthropometrics on Thermal Comfort in Malaysian Universities Air-Conditioned Buildings
Apart from indoor environmental and personal factors, contextual factors have significantly influenced several thermal comfort studies. In air-conditioned spaces, thermal comfort is conveniently attainable by adjusting the temperature settings, but indoor design elements might alter thermal percepti...
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Published in: | E3S web of conferences 2023-01, Vol.396, p.1004 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Apart from indoor environmental and personal factors, contextual factors have significantly influenced several thermal comfort studies. In air-conditioned spaces, thermal comfort is conveniently attainable by adjusting the temperature settings, but indoor design elements might alter thermal perceptions and provide adaptive opportunities. This study examines the influence of office design characteristics and anthropometrics on thermal comfort parameters and perceptions. Nineteen university offices in Kuala Lumpur and Shah Alam, comprised of twelve shared and seven private spaces, were investigated, and 628 responses were collected from 42 participants with even gender distributions. The results showed that room occupancy and size were statistically significant with Griffiths’ comfort temperature. Offices with five or more people had lower mean comfort temperature (24.1 ℃) than private offices (25.0 ℃). The mean comfort temperature in offices larger than 80 m
2
was 23.7 ℃ with warmer thermal preference, while offices smaller than 40 m
2
were approximately one-degree Celsius higher. Offices with no shading device, window blinds opened, and tiled floorings had mean comfort temperatures higher than 25.0 ℃. The findings also indicated that offices with more than a 60% glazing ratio have a slightly higher mean comfort temperature at 24.9 ℃. The thermal sensation during closed blinds was much cooler than opened ones. The anthropometry of the human body impacts how heat is regulated; thus, respondents with higher Body Mass Index (
BMI
) and above-average body surface area (higher than 1.7 m
2
) had significantly lower comfort temperatures and preferred more humid surroundings. Mean comfort temperature was statistically significant with
BMI
with a noticeable difference between underweight (25.1 ℃), normal (24.5 ℃), and obese (23.9 ℃)
BMI
s. In this study, it is recommended that
BMI
be considered when positioning occupants in shared offices, and window blinds are an integral shading device for adjusting indoor thermal comfort levels. |
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ISSN: | 2267-1242 2267-1242 |
DOI: | 10.1051/e3sconf/202339601004 |