Indoor thermal environment and adaptive behaviors in summer of urban households in northern China: Status and trend

被引:4
作者
Du, Jia [1 ]
Chen, Bin [1 ]
机构
[1] Dalian Univ Technol, Dept Civil Engn, Dalian, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Cooling demand; Occupant behaviors; Indoor environment quality; Home energy use; Northern China; SOCIAL PRACTICE THEORY; RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS; COMFORT; CONSUMPTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.enbuild.2024.114916
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Space cooling is one of the fastest growing end-uses globally due to climate change and upgraded living standards. However, existing studies were insufficient on human's adaptation to hot summer indoors other than in tropical or subtropical climate, hindering efficient cooling in buildings. This study examined the indoor thermal environment and adaptive behaviors in summer of urban households in northern China, to add new data and ideas in temperate climate. The meta-analysis review, online questionnaire survey, and national statistical databases were used to investigate thermal demand, device basis, and behavior modes of northern urban households. In addition, path analyses demonstrated the formation and dynamics of adaptive behaviors under social practice theories. Results showed that northern households got 2 degrees C hotter in summer since the new century, being close to southern cases. The penetration of air conditioners in urban China was 85%, which approached developed countries after the rapid growth since 2000, enabling affordable cooling at home. Although northern urbanites, particularly middle-aged or elderly people, were not addicted to air conditioning, young people, who adopted less frequently wellness habits, tended to rely on air conditioners and paid more power bills in summer. The findings will facilitate future studies on efficient cooling solutions.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 94 条
  • [31] Informing a social practice theory framework with social-psychological factors for analyzing routinized energy consumption: A multivariate analysis of three practices
    Hess, Ann-Kathrin
    Samuel, Robin
    Burger, Paul
    [J]. ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2018, 46 : 183 - 193
  • [32] What drives our behaviors in buildings? A review on occupant interactions with building systems from the lens of behavioral theories
    Heydarian, Arsalan
    McIlvennie, Claire
    Arpan, Laura
    Yousefi, Siavash
    Syndicus, Marc
    Schweiker, Marcel
    Jazizadeh, Farrokh
    Rissetto, Romina
    Pisello, Anna Laura
    Piselli, Cristina
    Berger, Christiane
    Yan, Zhuxuan
    Mahdavi, Ardeshir
    [J]. BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 179
  • [33] Diagramming social practice theory: An interdisciplinary experiment exploring practices as networks
    Higginson, Sarah
    McKenna, Eoghan
    Hargreaves, Tom
    Chilvers, Jason
    Thomson, Murray
    [J]. INDOOR AND BUILT ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 24 (07) : 950 - 969
  • [34] Future hotter summer greatly increases residential electricity consumption in Beijing: A study based on different house layouts and shared socioeconomic pathways
    Hu, Qiyuan
    Tang, Jiayue
    Gao, Xiang
    Wang, Sijia
    Zhang, Dan
    Qin, Yuting
    Wang, Qihan
    Zhou, Yi
    Huang, Na
    Penuelas, Josep
    Sardans, Jordi
    Canadell, Josep G.
    Ciais, Philippe
    Pan, Zhihua
    An, Pingli
    Xu, Lin
    Lun, Fei
    [J]. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2023, 91
  • [35] Achieving decent living standards in emerging economies challenges national mitigation goals for CO2 emissions
    Huo, Jingwen
    Meng, Jing
    Zheng, Heran
    Parikh, Priti
    Guan, Dabo
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 14 (01)
  • [36] IEA, 2022, Global average lifetime CO2 emissions per capita by decade of birth in the Net Zero Scenario, 1950s-2020s
  • [37] IEA, Sustainable, Affordable cooling can save tens of thousands of lives each year
  • [38] IEA, 2021, Net Zero by 2050
  • [39] IEA, 2021, Recommendations of the Global Commission on People-Centred Clean Energy Transitions
  • [40] IEA, 2021, WORLD ENERGY OUTLOOK, DOI DOI 10.1787/20725302