A Study on Energy-efficient Temperature Control
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32797
A Study on Energy-efficient Temperature Control

Authors: Mitsuyuki Kawakami, Kimihiro Yamanaka

Abstract:

The top-heavy demographic of low birth-rate and longer lifespan is a growing social problem, and one of its expected effects will be a shortage of young workers and a growing reliance on a workforce of middle-aged and older people. However, the environment of today's industrial workplace is not particularly suited to middle-aged and older workers, one notable problem being temperature control. Higher temperatures can cause health problems such as heat stroke, and the number of cases increases sharply in people over 65. Moreover, in conditions above 33°C, older people can develop circulatory system disorders, and also have a higher chance of suffering a fatal heart attack. We therefore propose a new method for controlling temperature in the indoor workplace. In this study two different verification experiments were conducted, with the proposed temperature control method being tested in cargo containers and conventional houses. The method's effectiveness was apparent in measurements of temperature and electricity consumption

Keywords: CO2 reduction, Energy saving, Temperature control

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1070135

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 1367

References:


[1] Ilmarinen. J, Tuomi. K, Eskelinen. L, Nygard. C-H, Huuhtanen. P & Klockars., Background and objectives of the finish research project on aging workers in municipal occupations, Second. J. Work Environ. Health, Vol.17, Supplement 1, 1981, pp.7-11.
[2] Kawakami. M & Kajihara. Y (2001), A model for activating the elderly in the production system, Proc. of NES2001, 2001, pp.359-363.
[3] Seisamo. J & Ilmarinen. J (1997), Life-Style aging and work ability among active finish workers in 1981-1992, Second. J. Work Environ. Health, Vol.23, Supplement 1, 1997, pp.20-26.
[4] Nygard. C-H, Huuhtanen. P, Tuomi. K & Martikainen. R, Perceived work changes between 1981 and 1992 among aging workers in finland, Second. J. Work Environ. Health, Vol.23, Supplement 1, 1997, pp.12-19.
[5] Haermae. M & Ilmarinen. J, Towards the 24-hour Society-New Approaches for Aging Shift Workers?, Second. J. Work Environ. Health, Vol. 25, No.6, 1999, pp.610-615.
[6] Huuhtanen. P, The aging worker in a changing work environment, Second. J. Work Environ. Health, Vol.14, Supplement 1, 1998, pp.21-23.
[7] Ilmarinen. J, Aging workers, Occupational & Environmental Medicine, Vol.58, Issue 8, 2001, pp.546-552.
[8] Kondo. M, Working-hours management for prevention of heat disorders in workplaces at high temperature, Journal of working environment, Vol.29, No.4, 2008, pp. 62-70.
[9] Shishime. T, Promoting countermeasures on urban heat island towards low carbon society, Environmental & sanitary engineering research, Vol.22, No.3, 2008, pp. 195-198.
[10] FY 2008 Annual Energy Report (outline) (2009, Aug). Agency for Natural Resources and Energy (ANRE) (Online). Available: http://www.enecho.meti.go.jp/english/report/outline.pdf.
[11] Global Environment Global Environment News Headline. The FY 2008 Annual Report on Ozone Layer Monitoring (2009, Sep 14). Ministry of the Environment Government (Online). Available: http://www.env.go.jp/en/headline/headline.php.