INDOOR AIR QUALITY AND COMFORT IN NATIVE AMERICAN SHELTERS: SIMULATION AND ACTUAL DATA ANALYSIS
Price
Free (open access)
Transaction
Volume
261
Pages
12
Page Range
351 - 362
Published
2023
Paper DOI
10.2495/ESUS230301
Copyright
Author(s)
PAUL FOWLER, FERNANDO DEL AMA GONZALO, ANTHONY DIVITO, ABIGAIL CARLSON, ZACHARY LIZOTTE
Abstract
The wigwam was a Native American shelter built in the north-eastern United States. This study determined if these structures supply comfort to human beings using modern measurement standards and if they provide indoor air quality levels that are healthy. Keene State College faculty and students built a full-size example of a wigwam and monitored data indoors and outdoors. When a fire was introduced into the wigwam to produce comfortable indoor temperatures, the analysis of air temperature and relative humidity, along with CO2, VOC, and PM2.5 levels, determined indoor air quality and comfort. By having a full-size example of a wigwam, the authors were able to compare the accuracy of a digital energy model. Comfort can be accomplished even when using modern standards in this native structure. Temperature, humidity, and rainfall exposure can all be controlled to acceptable levels. Indoor air quality is always at good levels when a fire is not involved because the indoor air in the wigwam is the same as exterior quality levels. However, the particulates and VOC introduced into the environment are at dangerous levels with an open fire. A wood stove with a flue pipe to the exterior was used to reduce the pollutants to acceptable and safe levels.
Keywords
Native American shelters, indoor air quality