Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
262961 | Energy and Buildings | 2014 | 10 Pages |
•Daylight-adaptive illumination control method with ceiling-located light sensors.•Improved workspace illumination by using light sensor calibration information.•Illumination performance and power savings of control methods analyzed.
We consider a daylight-adaptive lighting control system to adapt dimming levels of artificial light sources with changing daylight, under illumination constraints specified at the horizontal workspace plane of an occupant. We propose a control method for achieving a minimum illuminance at the workspace plane using illuminance measurements at light sensors situated at the ceiling, and additional prior-information from sensor calibration. The proposed method results in a linear programming optimization problem with inequality constraints. Using simulations with photometric data, we compare our sub-optimum solution with the solution where knowledge of the illuminance mapping from the light sensors to workspace illuminance values is available, and with a reference method that is based on satisfying illuminance constraints specified at the light sensors.