![]() |
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
|
Articles published in refereed international journals | |||||||||||||
B.1 Upper limits for indoor air humidity to avoid uncomfortably humid skin B.2 Upper limit for air humidity for preventing warm respiratory discomfort B.3 Individual control at each workplace for health, comfort and productivity B.4 Impact of temperature and humidity on the perception of indoor air quality B.5 Impact of velocity and temperature fluctuations on the accuracy of low velocity measurements indoors by thermal anemometers B.6 Impact of natural convection on accuracy of low velocity measurements by thermal anemometers with omnidirectional sensor B.7 Requirements and guidelines for low velocity measurements B.8 New method for testing dynamic characteristics of low velocity thermal anemometers B.9 Test method for describing directional sensitivity of anemometers for low velocity measurements indoors B.10 NORDPET. Pets indoors - a risk of sensitisation/allergy or protection against this? B.11 Impact of temperature and humidity on perception of indoor air quality during immediate and longer whole-body exposures B.12 Discomfort caused by odorants and irritants in the air B.13 Air humidity requirements for human comfort B.14 Perceived air quality, Sick Building Syndrome (SBS) symptoms and productivity in an office with two different pollution loads B.15 Impact of temperature and humidity on chemical and sensory emissions from building materials B.16 Residential pollutants and ventilation strategies: moisture and combustion products B.17 Residential pollutants and ventilation strategies: volatile organic compounds and radon B.18 The selection of turbulence models for prediction of room airflow B.19 Indoor air quality in the 21st century: search for excellence B.20 Discomfort due to skin humidity with different fabric textures and materials B.21 Temperature and humidity: important factors for perception of air quality and for ventilation requirements B.22 Ventilation efficiencies of desk-mounted task/ambient conditioning systems B.23 The effects of outdoor air supply rate in an office on perceived air quality, Sick Building Syndrome (SBS) symptoms and productivity B.24 Velocity distribution in a room ventilated by displacement ventilation and wall-mounted air terminal devices B.25 Good air quality in offices improves productivity B.26 Effect of renovating an office building on occupants' comfort and health B.27 Human requirements in future air-conditioned environments B.28 Measurements of the effects of air quality on sensory perception B.29 Dampness in buildings and health B.30 Visual analogue scales for detecting changes in symptoms of the sick building syndrome in an intervention study B.31 Ventilation and Health in Nonindustrial Indoor Environments. Report from a European Multidisciplinary Scientific Consensus Meeting B.32 Enhancing productivity while reducing energy use in buildings B.33 Human response to combined indoor environment exposures B.34 Extension of the PMV model to non-air-conditioned buildings in warm climates B.36 Ventilation and health in non-industrial indoor environments: report from a European Multidisciplinary Scientific Consensus Meeting (EUROVEN) B.37 Subjective perceptions, symptom intensity and performance: a comparison of two independent studies, both changing similarly the pollution load in an office B.38 Air quality in a simulated office environment as a result of reducing pollution sources and increasing ventilation B.39 Personalized ventilation: evaluation of different air terminal devices B.40 Human response to air movement - evaluation of ASHRAE's draft criteria (RP-843) B.41 Ozone-initiated reactions with mixtures of volatile organic compounds under simulated indoor conditions B.42 The significance of secondary organic aerosol formation and growth in buildings: experimental and computational evidence B.43 Generation and quantification of ultrafine particles through terpene/ozone reaction in a chamber setting B.44 Hydroxyl radicals in indoor environments B.45 Indoor hydrogen peroxide derived from ozone/d-limonene reactions B.46 Characterization of the dust/smoke aerosol that settled east of the World Trade Center (WTC) in Lower Manhattan after the collapse of the WTC, 11 September 2001 B.47 Modeling gas phase reactions in indoor environments using computational fluid dynamics B.48 Indoor/outdoor connections exemplified by processes that depend on an organic compound's saturation vapor pressure B.49 Experiments probing the influence of air exchange rates on secondary organic aerosols derived from indoor chemistry B.50 Effects of pollution from personal computers on perceived air quality, SBS symptoms and productivity in offices B.51 Binnenlucht met een hoge kwaliteit B.52 A kivalo minosegu levego biztositasa: kihivasok es lehetosegek (Providing indoor air of high quality: challenges and opportunities) B.53 The performance and subjective responses of call-center operators with new and used supply air filters at two outdoor air supply rates B.54 Human response to personalized ventilation and mixing ventilation B.55 The effects of moderate heat stress and open-plan office noise distraction on SBS symptoms and on the performance ofoffice work |
|||||||||||||
|
International Centre for Indoor Environment and Energy Department of Mechanical Engineering Technical University of Denmark June 2013 |