@article{22538, author = {William J Fisk and David Faulkner and Douglas P Sullivan}, title = {Accuracy of CO2 sensors}, abstract = {
Are the carbon dioxide (CO2) sensors in your demand controlled ventilation systems sufficiently accurate? The data from these sensors are used to automatically modulate minimum rates of outdoor air ventilation. The goal is to keep ventilation rates at or above design requirements while adjusting the ventilation rate with changes in occupancy in order to save energy. Studies of energy savings from demand controlled ventilation and of the relationship of indoor CO2 concentrations with health and work performance provide a strong rationale for use of indoor CO2 data to control minimum ventilation rates 1-7. However, this strategy will only be effective if, in practice, the CO2 sensors have a reasonable accuracy. The objective of this study was; therefore, to determine if CO2 sensor performance, in practice, is generally acceptable or problematic. This article provides a summary of study methods and findings – additional details are available in a paper in the proceedings of the ASHRAE IAQ'2007 Conference8.
}, year = {2008}, journal = {IAQ Applications}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {15-17}, language = {eng}, }