Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight

In this study, the colour quality of the daylight transmitted through different window glazing types is evaluated. The analysis considered four different types of window glazing: laminated, monolithic, coated and applied film glazing ranging in luminous transmittance from around 0.97 to <0.1. The...

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Main Authors: Rajendra Dangol, Thijs Kruisselbrink, Alexander Rosemann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SolarLits 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Daylighting
Subjects:
Online Access:http://solarlits.com/jd/4-37.html
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spelling doaj-4144f917e54d4fc48879e79c8e02f3092020-11-25T01:49:54ZengSolarLitsJournal of Daylighting2383-87012017-12-0142374710.15627/jd.2017.6Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted DaylightRajendra Dangol0Thijs Kruisselbrink1Alexander Rosemann2Department of the Built Environment, Building Lighting Group, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The NetherlandsDepartment of the Built Environment, Building Lighting Group, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The NetherlandsDepartment of the Built Environment, Building Lighting Group, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The NetherlandsIn this study, the colour quality of the daylight transmitted through different window glazing types is evaluated. The analysis considered four different types of window glazing: laminated, monolithic, coated and applied film glazing ranging in luminous transmittance from around 0.97 to <0.1. The spectral transmittance data of different window glazing types are taken from the International Glazing Data Base (IGDB), which is maintained by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories (LBNL). The study showed that the CIE CRI does not always seem to be the suitable method to predict the colour quality of daylight in building for particular situations. However, in the context of this study, the prediction of colour rendering properties of window glazing by other metrics such as Colour Quality Scale (version 9), Memory CRI, Ra,D65 (adjusted CRI metric with D65 as the reference illuminant) performed better. For most of the daylit situations inside the building, the chromaticity difference criterion was not met. Judging the colour quality of such situations requires different method.http://solarlits.com/jd/4-37.htmlColour renderingColour qualityCIE CRIWindow glazing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajendra Dangol
Thijs Kruisselbrink
Alexander Rosemann
spellingShingle Rajendra Dangol
Thijs Kruisselbrink
Alexander Rosemann
Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
Journal of Daylighting
Colour rendering
Colour quality
CIE CRI
Window glazing
author_facet Rajendra Dangol
Thijs Kruisselbrink
Alexander Rosemann
author_sort Rajendra Dangol
title Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
title_short Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
title_full Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
title_fullStr Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Window Glazing on Colour Quality of Transmitted Daylight
title_sort effect of window glazing on colour quality of transmitted daylight
publisher SolarLits
series Journal of Daylighting
issn 2383-8701
publishDate 2017-12-01
description In this study, the colour quality of the daylight transmitted through different window glazing types is evaluated. The analysis considered four different types of window glazing: laminated, monolithic, coated and applied film glazing ranging in luminous transmittance from around 0.97 to <0.1. The spectral transmittance data of different window glazing types are taken from the International Glazing Data Base (IGDB), which is maintained by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories (LBNL). The study showed that the CIE CRI does not always seem to be the suitable method to predict the colour quality of daylight in building for particular situations. However, in the context of this study, the prediction of colour rendering properties of window glazing by other metrics such as Colour Quality Scale (version 9), Memory CRI, Ra,D65 (adjusted CRI metric with D65 as the reference illuminant) performed better. For most of the daylit situations inside the building, the chromaticity difference criterion was not met. Judging the colour quality of such situations requires different method.
topic Colour rendering
Colour quality
CIE CRI
Window glazing
url http://solarlits.com/jd/4-37.html
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