4.7 Article

Study of pedestrians' mixed thermal responses when experiencing rapid and simultaneous variations in sun and wind conditions in urban continuums

Journal

SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
Volume 87, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2022.104169

Keywords

Dynamic thermal environment; Walking; Urban continuum; Variations in wind and solar radiation; Skin temperature; Thermal comfort

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China
  2. [C5002 -14 G]

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This study observed the thermal perceptions and skin temperature of 70 college students in urban environments and found that simultaneous variations in wind and solar radiation can influence pedestrian thermal comfort, leading to an increase in acceptable air temperature range and skin temperature threshold.
Rich, rapid, and simultaneous variations in wind and solar radiation produced by complex urban continuums are supposed to have positive effects on thermal comfort during walking. However, the identification of these in-fluences is still challenging. In view of this, this study observed the mixed thermal perceptions and skin tem-perature of 70 healthy young college students when strolling in two complex urban continuums and experiencing rapid variations in sun and wind conditions. An index was proposed to categorize the varying wind and solar radiation in both numerical and geometrical respects. The results showed that, the intensities of varying wind, varying solar radiation, and air temperature simultaneously influenced the mixed thermal perceptions. Mean-while, the intensity of simultaneously varied wind and solar radiation can be quantified by the mean skin temperature variability in a multiple linear model. An increase in the intensity of simultaneously varied wind and solar radiation led to a two-degree rise in the acceptable air temperature and a 1.2-degree increase in the mean skin temperature threshold for irritation. The study revealed the effects of simultaneously varied wind and solar radiation on pedestrian thermal comfort, motivating urban planners to take advantage of the dynamic nature created by urban morphologies to generate wind and solar radiation variations for comfort.

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