Abstract

The indoor thermal history of residents in the hot summer and cold winter climate zone in China have undergone a significant change in recent years, which also changes their seasonal thermal adaptations and this has formed feed-back effects to the increasing usage of air conditioning units in this area. To study the seasonal variations of thermal adaptation, the thermal comfort experiments were conducted on two groups of participants. Each groups included 20 participants who had indoor history mainly with natural ventilation (NV group) and air-conditioning (AC group), respectively. The results demonstrated that the thermal sensation vote (TSV) in warm environments did not differ between AC and NV subjects in summer. However, the TSV of AC subjects were much lower than that of NV subjects in the same standard effective temperature and skin temperature in a cold environment in winter. Overall, the participants who spent most of their time in AC space in winter showed a low level of thermal adaptation with a narrower acceptable skin temperature range of 32.6 – 33.5 °C. Thus, this study presents the basic information regarding the seasonal effects on human thermal adaptation due to different long-term indoor thermal histories.

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