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Control Strategies for Daylight and Artificial Lighting in Office Buildings-A Bibliometrically Assisted Review

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14133852

Keywords

office buildings; control strategies; daylight; artificial lighting; energy efficiency; comfort; user-centered systems

Categories

Funding

  1. Province of Tyrol
  2. European Regional Development Fund (EFRE) [EFRE K-Regio 10033]

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A significant portion of energy consumption in office buildings comes from lighting, with energy efficiency improvements focusing on reducing artificial lighting through intelligent daylight utilization. Control strategies in the field mostly rule-based and emphasize either comfort or energy objectives. The future trend is moving towards decentralized control concepts, including appropriate occupancy detection and space zoning.
A significant proportion of the total energy consumption in office buildings is attributable to lighting. Enhancements in energy efficiency are currently achieved through strategies to reduce artificial lighting by intelligent daylight utilization. Control strategies in the field of daylighting and artificial lighting are mostly rule-based and focus either on comfort aspects or energy objectives. This paper aims to provide an overview of published scientific literature on enhanced control strategies, in which new control approaches are critically analysed regarding the fulfilment of energy efficiency targets and comfort criteria simultaneously. For this purpose, subject-specific review articles from the period between 2015 and 2020 and their research sources from as far back as 1978 are analysed. Results show clearly that building controls increasingly need to address multiple trades to achieve a maximum improvement in user comfort and energy efficiency. User acceptance can be highlighted as a decisive factor in achieving targeted system efficiencies, which are highly determined by the ability of active user interaction in the automatic control system. The future trend is moving towards decentralized control concepts including appropriate occupancy detection and space zoning. Simulation-based controls and learning systems are identified as appropriate methods that can play a decisive role in reducing building energy demand through integral control concepts.

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