Publication date: April 2015
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 86
Author(s): Alberto Barbaresi , Daniele Torreggiani , Stefano Benni , Patrizia Tassinari
Indoor air temperature monitoring is a basic activity giving useful information in many fields such as human thermal comfort, food preservation conditions and energy simulations. The collected data can help the room management and, their elaborations, can improve energy-efficient building design. The survey equipment installation in an indoor space – sensor number and positions, record frequency – is a delicate procedure depending on several conditions related to the specific room. Nevertheless specific installation procedures are nor defined or codified in the scientific literature. This study aims at the definition of a temperature survey method, both accurate and cost-effective, able to quantify and maximize precision and accuracy of the temperature monitoring in indoor spaces, through an experimental temperature test carried out on a wine-aging room of an Italian wine farm. The method allows to identify homogeneous temperature zones, the number of sensors to be installed and the proper data recording frequency, based on the specific needs of the process under study. This method is experimentally validated by means of a test carried out on a wine-aging room.
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 86
Author(s): Alberto Barbaresi , Daniele Torreggiani , Stefano Benni , Patrizia Tassinari