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Channel: ScienceDirect Publication: Building and Environment
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An attempt to improve indoor environment by installing humidity-sensitive air inlets in a naturally ventilated kindergarten building

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Publication date: Available online 5 November 2016
Source:Building and Environment
Author(s): Maciej Mijakowski, Jerzy Sowa
Proper values of hydro-thermal parameters and good air quality indoors are known to have a great influence on human comfort, health and performance, and children are particularly susceptible to poor indoor air quality. On the other hand, there is a tendency in developed countries to modernise educational buildings to reduce energy use, and as a result, outdoor air frequently can no longer penetrate into the buildings through thermally insulated exterior walls or through airtight window frames. This may lead to high concentrations of pollutants generated indoors, increased levels of relative humidity and, often, to overheating. Installation of extra air vents (trickle vents) is sometimes recommended as a solution. The present study focuses on a comparison of passive stack ventilation performance as well as indoor conditions before and after installation of humidity-sensitive air inlets in a kindergarten building. The comparison was based on two one-month-long series of monitoring of temperature, humidity and CO2 concentration which took place before and after the installation. The results were assessed against current recommendations, and the effectiveness of the improvement was discussed. Unfortunately, the analysis of indoor conditions and ventilation performance showed that although humidity-sensitive air inlets improved performance of passive stack ventilation, the effect was not sufficient to meet current Polish and European standards and recommendations for indoor environment in newly designed kindergarten buildings.


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