Requirements for thermal comfort study material

1. Introduction – Thermal Comfort

Thermal comfort is an important aspect of the building design process, as the modern person spends most of the day indoors. Thermal comfort is defined as “a state of mind that expresses satisfaction with the thermal environment” (ASHRAE Standart 55-2004); the definition is easy to understand, but it is difficult to express it in physical parameters. There is extensive modeling and standardization for thermal comfort, which depends on both physical and physiological parameters as well as psychology. The thermal environment itself can be described as the properties of the environment that affect the exchange of heat between the human body and the environment. Research and practice in the field of thermal well-being is not a static field, on the contrary, since the emergence of air conditioning in the built environment, this field has expanded. One of the research highlights was the development of the PMV (Predicted Mean Vote) model by Fanger in the late 1960s (Fanger, 1970), which is used to assess indoor thermal comfort and forms the basis of current thermal comfort standards.

Thermal comfort is a very interdisciplinary field of study as it involves many aspects of different scientific disciplines: building science, physiology and psychology to name a few. This adds to the complexity of the matter. Advances in computing have led to an increased and improved ability to evaluate and model complex physical and physiological states. This meant not only more easily solving the non-linear equations on which the PMV model is based, but also performing complex performance simulations of buildings that were in the design phase to predict the comfort of future occupants.

Because energy consumption in apartment buildings is constantly growing due to the influence of a developing society, while increasing demands for the well-being of the environment, or for the thermal well-being of people staying in public buildings, it is important to apply systems that consume as little energy as possible and at the same time provide a comfortable indoor environment. Nowadays, the use of radiant systems for heating and cooling living spaces is very widespread, their main advantages are lower energy consumption, higher comfort for users, self-regulation of the system, lower heat loss. Surface radiant systems also have the advantage that they are very flexible in relation to the spatial and temporal regulation of heat output and enable an almost individual supply of heat to the selected space.