Investigation on Thermal Comfort and Thermal Adaptive Behaviors of Rural Residents in Suibin Town, China, in Summer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
No. | Authors | Year | Region | Gist |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Zhu et al. [16] | 2010 | Rural houses in Yinchuan, China | 1; 2 |
2 | Huang et al. [17] | 2011 | Rural houses in Beijing, China | 1; 4; 5 |
3 | Yang et al. [18] | 2011 | Rural houses in Guanzhong area, China | 1; 4; 5 |
4 | Oikonomou et al. [10] | 2011 | Dwellings in Northwest Greece | 1; 2 |
5 | Jin et al. [19] | 2013 | Rural houses in eastern Guangdong, China | 1; 4; 5 |
6 | Ge et al. [20] | 2013 | Rural houses in Weifang, China | 1; 4; 5 |
7 | Alev et al. [11] | 2014 | Dwellings in Estonia, Finland and Sweden | 1; 2 |
8 | Nematchoua et al. [12] | 2014 | Dwellings in Cameroon | 2 |
9 | Nia [13] | 2014 | Houses in northern Iran | 3 |
10 | Wang et al. [21] | 2014 | Rural houses in Harbin, China | 1; 4; 5 |
11 | Zhang Qi et al. [22] | 2014 | Dwellings in Shanghai, Shandong, Xinjiang, Liaoning and Guangxi, China | 1; 4; 5; 6 |
12 | Liu et al. [23] | 2016 | Dwellings in Khampa Tibetan area, China | 1; 2 |
13 | Xiong et al. [24] | 2016 | Rural houses in Hubei, China | 1; 2; 7; 8 |
14 | Liu et al. [25] | 2018 | Rural houses in Central Hainan, China | 1; 8 |
15 | Pang et al. [26] | 2018 | Rural houses in Beihai, China | 1; 5; 7 |
16 | Li et al. [27] | 2018 | Rural houses in western Liaoling, China | 2 |
17 | Al-Absi [14] | 2019 | High-rise residential building in Malaysia | 8 |
18 | Ni Sijia [28] | 2020 | Rural houses in Central Jiangxi, China | 2; 7 |
2. Background Information
2.1. Village Location and Climate
2.2. Village Residential Appearance
3. Research Methods
3.1. Investigation Methods
3.2. Measurement of Indoor and Outdoor Environmental Parameters
3.3. Subjective Questionnaire Survey
- (1)
- Sex, age and residence time of the subject;
- (2)
- Subject’s activities within a set 15 min. There were some common activities to choose from listed in the questionnaire;
- (3)
- Subject’s clothing, from underwear to outerwear. There was a detailed list of clothing types in the questionnaire to choose from;
- (4)
- Subject’s subjective feelings, including thermal sensation, thermal comfort, thermal acceptability, thermal preference, humidity sensations, humidity preferences, air movement sensations and air movement preferences;
- (5)
- Subject’s window-opening behaviors and thermal adaptive behaviors. There were some common thermal adaptive behaviors to choose from in the questionnaire.
3.4. Calculation Methods
- to—operative temperature (°C);
- tɑ—air temperature (°C);
- —mean radiant temperature (°C);
- hr—linear radiative heat transfer coefficient (W/m2·°C);
- hc—convective heat transfer coefficient (W/m2·°C).
- to—operative temperature (°C);
- tɑ—air temperature (°C);
- —mean radiant temperature (°C);
- A—correction coefficient. When the air velocity is less than 0.2 m/s, it takes the value of 0.5, but when it is 0.2 m/s to 0.6 m/s, it takes 0.6, and when it is 0.6 m/s to 1.0 m/s, it takes the value 0.7.
- —mean radiant temperature (°C);
- tɡ—black globe temperature (°C);
- tɑ—air temperature (°C);
- vɑ—air velocity (m/s);
- D—the diameter of the black globe (m);
- εɡ—the emissivity of the black globe.
- —mean radiant temperature (°C);
- tɡ—black globe temperature (°C);
- tɑ—air temperature (°C);
- vɑ—air velocity (m/s).
- hcɡ—coefficient of heat transfer by convection of the black globe (W/m2·K);
- ΔT—difference between black globe temperature and air temperature (°C);
- vɑ—air velocity (m/s);
- D—the diameter of the black globe (m).
4. Results and Analysis
4.1. Outdoor Physical Parameters
4.2. Thermal Sensation
4.2.1. Analysis of Thermal Sensation Vote
- ①
- Taking the operative temperature of each subject, calculated according to the measured data, as the independent variable and the value of the TSV of each subject as the dependent variable, the linear regression equation was obtained through regression analysis: TSV = a × to + b;
- ②
- A significance test of the linear regression relation was necessary. Generally speaking, when p is less than 0.05, the regression relationship is usually considered to be significant. If the regression relation of equation TSV = a × to + b was significant, this showed that the TSV yielded by this regression equation can be used to predict human thermal sensation well.
4.2.2. Analysis of Mean Thermal Sensation Vote
- ①
- An operative temperature within the range calculated according to the measured data was divided into several operative temperature intervals separated by ±0.25 °C, so the Δto value was 0.5 °C for each operative temperature interval. For example, [22.5 °C, 23.0 °C] [23.0 °C, 23.5 °C] [23.5 °C, 24.0 °C] [24.0 °C, 24.5 °C] [24.5 °C, 25.0 °C] [25.0 °C, 25.5 °C] [25.5 °C, 26.0 °C] [26.0 °C, 26.5 °C] [26.5 °C, 27.0 °C] [27.0 °C, 27.5 °C] [27.5 °C, 28.0 °C] [28.0 °C, 28.5 °C] [28.5 °C, 29.0 °C] [29.0 °C, 29.5 °C] [29.5 °C, 30.0 °C] [30.0 °C, 30.5 °C] [30.5 °C, 31.0 °C] [31.0 °C, 31.5 °C] [31.5 °C, 32.0 °C] [32.0 °C, 32.5 °C] and [32.5 °C, 33.0 °C]. The number of operative temperature intervals was 21 in total;
- ②
- We then calculated the average of the thermal sensation vote values given by all subjects in each operative temperature interval;
- ③
- Taking the operative temperature at the midpoint of each operative temperature interval as the independent variable and the MTS value of each operative temperature interval as the dependent variable, the linear regression relation was obtained through regression analysis—MTS = a × to + b;
- ④
- A significance test of the linear regression relation was necessary.
4.2.3. Comparative Analysis of the TSV and MTS
4.3. Thermal Comfort and Thermal Acceptability
4.4. Thermal Preference
4.5. Humidity Sensation and Humidity Preference
4.6. Air Movement Sensation and Air Movement Preference
4.7. Thermal Adaptive Behavior
5. Conclusions
- The regression analysis method was used to analyze and define the neutral temperature and acceptable temperature ranges. It was found that the correlation between operative temperature and the MTS is stronger than that between operative temperature and the TSV, and the thermal neutral temperature is 25.1 °C, while 80% of the acceptable temperature range [22.5 °C, 27.6 °C] was obtained. This shows that the rural residents in severely cold areas have a wide range of acceptable temperatures, and most of them feel comfortable in and have a high degree of acceptance of their indoor thermal environment. Critical discomfort was reached in rural residents in the Suibin area in summer when the indoor temperature was less than 22.5 °C and more than 27.6 °C. The applicability of the thermal comfort evaluation index to the operative temperature in a severely cold area was thus verified;
- Rural residents in severely cold areas hope for a cooler indoor temperature in summer, of which they are more accepting and with which they are more satisfied. The preferred temperature is 25.3 °C in summer, which is very close to the neutral temperature (25.1 °C). In addition, there is a strong correlation between thermal sensation and thermal acceptability;
- Rural residents in severely cold areas are more satisfied with their experienced humidity than with the air movement in summer, which indicates that the influence of air movement on indoor thermal comfort is higher than that of humidity. In total, 72.64% of the subjects expressed a relatively positive feeling of humidity in summer; 54.4% of the subjects scored the AMSV less than 0, stating that indoor air flow was low, and 48.65% of the subjects stated a preference for increased indoor air flow in summer. This also explains why 73.65% of the subjects adapt to their indoor environment in summer by opening doors and windows for ventilation;
- Rural residents in severely cold areas describe opening windows (73.65%), staying in the shade (48.65%), reducing activities (43.92%), changing clothes (39.19%), etc., as means of increasing their indoor thermal comfort in summer. These preferred thermal adaptive behaviors have the common characteristics of tradition, convenience and low price. Rural residents do not tend to undertake relatively cumbersome and expensive thermal adaptive behaviors. In addition, the clothing insulation of rural residents in severely cold areas decreases with the increase in indoor operative temperature. Further, their clothing insulation decreases by 0.0137 clo for every 1 °C increase in the indoor operative temperature. Therefore, rural residents’ acceptance of indoor thermal comfort in summer in severely cold areas is influenced by economic, psychological and adaptive behaviors.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Parameter | Structure | U-Value |
---|---|---|
roof | iron sheet + timber | 2.4 W/m2·K |
suspended ceiling | plant ash + timber + plastic board | 0.7 W/m2·K |
external wall | red brick + cement mortar | 1.5 W/m2·K |
internal wall | red brick + white lime | 2.6 W/m2·K |
ground | ceramic tile + cement mortar | 3.9 W/m2·K |
door | wooden door with iron sheet | 2.8 W/m2·K |
window | wooden window with glass (SHGC = 0.87) | 5.9 W/m2·K |
Instrument | Testo 435 Anemometer | JTR04 Black Ball Temperature Instrument | BES-02B Temperature and Humidity Recorder |
---|---|---|---|
Measured parameter | Temperature, humidity and air velocity | Black globe temperature | Temperature and humidity |
Range | −20~+70 °C 0~+100% RH 0~+20 m/s | +5~+120 °C | −30~+50 °C 0~+99% RH |
Accuracy | ±0.3 °C ±2% RH ±0.03 m/s | ±0.5 °C | ≤0.5 °C ≤3% RH |
Characteristic | — | Globe diameter (150 mm) and emissivity (>0.95) | Automatic temperature and humidity acquisition |
Male (%) | Female (%) | Age Distribution (%) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0–18 | 19–29 | 30–39 | 40–49 | 50–59 | 60–69 | 70+ | ||
50.68 | 49.32 | 2.36 | 12.84 | 11.15 | 19.93 | 28.38 | 14.53 | 10.81 |
−3 | −2 | −1 | 0 | +1 | +2 | +3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thermal sensation vote (TSV) | Cold | Cool | Slightly cool | Neutral | Slightly warm | Warm | Hot |
Humidity sensation vote (HSV) | Very dry | Dry | Slightly dry | Neutral | Slightly humid | Humid | Very humid |
Air movement sensation vote (AMSV) | Very low | Low | Slightly low | Neutral | Slightly high | High | Very high |
−1 | 0 | +1 | |
---|---|---|---|
Thermal preference vote (TPV) | Be cooler | No change | Be warmer |
Humidity preference vote (HPV) | Be more dryer | No change | Be more humid |
Air movement preference vote (AMPV) | Be lower | No change | Be higher |
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thermal comfort vote (TCV) | Comfortable | Slightly uncomfortable | Uncomfortable | Very uncomfortable | Extremely uncomfortable |
Thermal acceptability vote (TAV) | Acceptable | Unacceptable | — | — | — |
Parameter | Max | Min | Mean | S |
---|---|---|---|---|
Outdoor air temperature (°C) | 35.77 | 15.56 | 23.75 | 5.47 |
Outdoor relative humidity (%) | 92.05 | 22.20 | 57.03 | 18.94 |
to (°C) | MTS | to (°C) | MTS | to (°C) | MTS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
22.75 | 0 | 26.25 | −0.1 | 29.75 | 1.1 |
23.25 | 0 | 26.75 | −0.2 | 30.25 | 2 |
23.75 | 0 | 27.25 | 0.2 | 30.75 | 2 |
24.25 | 0 | 27.75 | 0.1 | 31.25 | 2.5 |
24.75 | 0.1 | 28.25 | 0 | 31.75 | 3 |
25.25 | 0.1 | 28.75 | 0.6 | 32.25 | 3 |
25.75 | 0.1 | 29.25 | 1.1 | 32.75 | 3 |
Regression Equation | Thermal Neutral Operative Temperature | 90% Acceptable Temperature Interval | 80% Acceptable Temperature Interval |
---|---|---|---|
TSV = 0.3300to − 8.5293 (R2 = 0.299, p < 0.001) | 25.8 °C | [24.3 °C, 27.4 °C] | [23.3 °C, 28.4 °C] |
MTS = 0.3335to − 8.3691 (R2 = 0.773, p < 0.001) | 25.1 °C | [23.6 °C, 26.6 °C] | [22.5 °C, 27.6 °C] |
TSV | TAP (%) |
---|---|
−3 (Cold) | — |
−2 (Cool) | 69.23 |
−1 (Slightly cool) | 75 |
0 (Neutral) | 100 |
1 (Slightly warm) | 81.43 |
2 (Warm) | 58.14 |
3 (Hot) | 23.81 |
to (°C) | TPPCooler (%) | TPPWarmer (%) | to (°C) | TPPCooler (%) | TPPWarmer (%) | to (°C) | TPPCooler (%) | TPPWarmer (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
22.75 | 0.00 | 100.00 | 26.25 | 23.53 | 20.59 | 29.75 | 71.43 | 0.00 |
23.25 | 0.00 | 100.00 | 26.75 | 30.30 | 21.21 | 30.25 | 78.38 | 0.00 |
23.75 | 42.86 | 14.29 | 27.25 | 38.71 | 16.13 | 30.75 | 100.00 | 0.00 |
24.25 | 33.33 | 0.00 | 27.75 | 42.86 | 14.29 | 31.25 | 100.00 | 0.00 |
24.75 | 33.33 | 9.52 | 28.25 | 25.00 | 18.75 | 31.75 | 100.00 | 0.00 |
25.25 | 52.00 | 20.00 | 28.75 | 58.33 | 4.17 | 32.25 | 100.00 | 0.00 |
25.75 | 38.89 | 5.56 | 29.25 | 62.50 | 0.00 | 32.75 | 100.00 | 0.00 |
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Yin, Q.; Zhang, Y.; Liu, Y. Investigation on Thermal Comfort and Thermal Adaptive Behaviors of Rural Residents in Suibin Town, China, in Summer. Sustainability 2023, 15, 6630. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15086630
Yin Q, Zhang Y, Liu Y. Investigation on Thermal Comfort and Thermal Adaptive Behaviors of Rural Residents in Suibin Town, China, in Summer. Sustainability. 2023; 15(8):6630. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15086630
Chicago/Turabian StyleYin, Qing, Yuqi Zhang, and Ying Liu. 2023. "Investigation on Thermal Comfort and Thermal Adaptive Behaviors of Rural Residents in Suibin Town, China, in Summer" Sustainability 15, no. 8: 6630. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15086630
APA StyleYin, Q., Zhang, Y., & Liu, Y. (2023). Investigation on Thermal Comfort and Thermal Adaptive Behaviors of Rural Residents in Suibin Town, China, in Summer. Sustainability, 15(8), 6630. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15086630