4.5 Article

Effects of Positioning of Multi-Sensor Devices on Occupancy and Indoor Environmental Monitoring in Single-Occupant Offices

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14196296

Keywords

data reliability; sensor placement; IoT; sensor accuracy; PIR sensors; sensor fusion

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union [731198]
  2. Swedish Energy Agency within E2B2 program [47878-1]
  3. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [731198] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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The advancements in sensor and communication technologies have led to rapid growth in applications for occupancy and indoor environmental monitoring in buildings. However, inadequate sensor positioning can affect data reliability, especially in multi-sensor devices. This study found that the positions of PIR and CO2 sensors significantly impact occupancy detection, highlighting the importance of proper sensor placement for accurate data collection.
The advancements in sensor and communication technologies drive the rapid developments in the applications of occupancy and indoor environmental monitoring in buildings. Currently, the installation standards for sensors are scarce and the recommendations for sensor positionings are very general. However, inadequate sensor positioning might diminish the reliability of sensor data, which could have serious impacts on the intended applications such as the performance of demand-controlled HVAC systems and their energy use. Thus, there is a need to understand how sensor positioning may affect the sensor data, specifically when using multi-sensor devices in which several sensors are being bundled together. This study is based on the data collected from 18 multi-sensor devices installed in three single-occupant offices (six sensors in each office). Each multi-sensor device included sensors to measure passive infrared (PIR) radiation, temperature, CO2, humidity, and illuminance. The results show that the positions of PIR and CO2 sensors significantly affect the reliability of occupancy detection. The typical approach of positioning the sensors on the ceiling, in the middle of offices, may lead to relatively unreliable data. In this case, the PIR sensor in that position has only 60% accuracy of presence detection. Installing the sensors under office desks could increase the accuracy of presence detection to 84%. These two sensor positions are highlighted in sensor fusion analysis as they could reach the highest accuracy compared to other pairs of PIR sensors. Moreover, sensor positioning can affect various indoor environmental parameters, especially temperature and illuminance measurements.

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