4.7 Article

The effect of solar radiation on pedestrian thermal comfort: A climate chamber experiment

Journal

BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 245, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.buildenv.2023.110869

Keywords

Non-uniform environments; Mean radiant temperature; Solar radiation; Skin temperature; Pedestrian thermal comfort

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Walking promotes human health and well-being, but increasing temperatures due to climate change and urban heat islands pose challenges to urban walkability. This study investigates the thermal impacts of solar radiation on walking individuals and finds that thermal sensation varies depending on the direction of radiation.
Walking promotes human health and well-being. However, increasing temperatures due to global climate change and urban heat islands challenge urban walkability. While people navigate urban settings, they encounter asymmetrical environmental conditions not captured by most thermal comfort models. Critically, these models predominantly factor in the Mean Radiant Temperature (MRT) but tend to neglect the effects of non-uniform solar radiation on human comfort. This study delves into the thermal impacts of solar radiation on walking individuals, utilizing a controlled environment with solar simulators. 28 subjects walked on a treadmill, simulating the walking state of pedestrians, under asymmetrical radiation conditions with the source being overhead, in front, behind, and to the side. Participants responded to queries concerning their overall thermal comfort, thermal sensation, and thermal acceptability. In addition, they provided feedback on directional and segmental thermal sensations across various body parts. Our findings revealed that the thermal sensation varied depending on the direction of radiation, and their responses regarding their forearms were most closely related to their whole body. These results provide information that can be valuable in the design of outdoor environments that will be thermally comfortable and will encourage people to walk during hot weather.

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