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Torres Escribano, José Luis

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Torres Escribano

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José Luis

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Ingeniería

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ISC. Institute of Smart Cities

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0000-0001-9275-8158

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241

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  • PublicationOpen Access
    Evaluación comparativa de 19 modelos de estimación de irradiancia difusa sobre planos inclinados dependiendo del tipo de cielo estándar ISO/CIE
    (LNEG, 2020) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; Sáenz Gamasa, Carlos; Hernández Salueña, Begoña; Illanes, R.; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Ciencias; Zientziak
    En este trabajo se han evaluado 19 modelos de estimación de irradiancia difusa sobre el plano inclinado, que incluyen tanto modelos isotrópicos o pseudoisotrópicos como modelos anisotrópicos. Dicha evaluación se ha llevado a cabo a partir una serie de 5396 observaciones de irradiancia global, difusa y directa realizadas entre julio y diciembre de 2018 en la estación radiométrica de la Universidad Pública de Navarra (UPNA). El estado del cielo correspondiente a cada observación se ha caracterizado de acuerdo con el CIE Standard General Sky propuesto en la norma ISO 15469:2004(E)/CIE S 011/E:2003. Para esta clasificación se han utilizado las medidas de distribución angular de luminancia y radiancia proporcionadas por un escáner de cielo ubicado en la propia estación de la UPNA. De tal manera que, para cada combinación de orientación e inclinación del plano, se ha evaluado la bondad de los distintos modelos de acuerdo con los 15 tipos de cielo estándar propuestos por la norma ISO/CIE. Los resultados revelan que el modelo de Perez et al. 2 presenta los mejores resultados globales, así como en 5 de los 15 tipos de cielo ISO/CIE.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Luminance calibration of a full sky HDR imaging system using sky scanner measurements
    (Solar Energy Society, 2022) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Sáenz Gamasa, Carlos; Hernández Salueña, Begoña; García Santos, Rafael; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Zientziak; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ciencias; Ingeniería
    A full sky High Dynamic Range imaging system, based on a Single-Lens Reflex camera with a fisheye lens, has been constructed and calibrated with a sky scanner luminance meter. The method considers the geometrical, spectral, timing and orientation issues between instruments. The calibration data sets, having nearly simultaneous measurements under stable sky conditions, were obtained from approximately one month of data using selection variables based in the experimental design. For luminance estimation we use the standard 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 RGB combination and a Spectrally Matched Luminance (𝑆𝑀𝐿) predictor, matching the spectral response of the instruments. With 738 calibration points having luminances up to 23.6 kcd∕m2, covering 98.5% of the sky luminance range, 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 is linearly correlated with sky scanner measurements with a coefficient of determination 𝑅2 = 0.9927 and a Root Mean Squared Error (𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸) of 7.7%. 𝑆𝑀𝐿 gives better results, with 𝑅2 = 0.9973 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 5.3%. With 253 calibration points with luminances up to 12.9 kcd∕m2, comprising 94.1% of the sky luminance range, both predictors clearly improve, with 𝑅2 = 0.9964 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 4.1% in case of 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 and 𝑅2 = 0.9982 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 2.9% in case of 𝑆𝑀𝐿.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Proposal and evaluation of typical illuminance year (TIY) generation procedures from illuminance or irradiance data for daylight assessment in the long term
    (Elsevier, 2020) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Ingeniería; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    When assessing the long-term daylight availability or the performance of natural lighting systems in a given location, it is necessary to have representative data of local daylight conditions. The use of a daylight test reference year (TRY) becomes a good option in these cases. This paper proposes and evaluates a procedure for the generation of a typical illuminance year (TIY) considering illuminance as the only variable for selecting the typical periods that make up the reference year. Two versions of TIY are presented, one composed of 12 typical months selected from the series of observations and another composed of 365 typical days. Each of these versions is used to obtain a global illuminance TIY (TGIY) and a diffuse illuminance TIY (TDIY) from a 27-year dataset corresponding to the Vaulx-en-Velin station (France). Furthermore, 12 luminous efficacy models have been evaluated in order to obtain a TIY from a TRY generated from irradiance data when no illuminance data are available. Thus, a global luminous efficacy model and a diffuse model are selected after benchmarking different models, considering both their original coefficients and those adjusted to local conditions. The results reveal that the monthly version of the TGIY and the daily version of the TDIY show the best overall fit to the long-term dataset. TIYs obtained from illuminance data are also observed to be statistically indistinguishable from those obtained after applying a luminous efficacy model to an irradiance-based TRY.