Optical coupling of grouped tunnels to decrease the energy and materials consumption of their lighting installations
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Tunnel lighting Energy savings Sustainable tunnelling
Fecha
2019-09Referencia bibliográfica
Peña-García, A. Optical coupling of grouped tunnels to decrease the energy and materials consumption of their lighting installations. Tunnelling and Underground Space Technology, 91, 103007, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tust.2019.103007
Patrocinador
MINECO/FEDER ENE2015-67031-RResumen
The increasing improvement of tunnelling technology allows more and more complex tunnels every day. Thus,
together with the classical road tunnels through mountains, with lengths generally under two or three of kilometers,
longer and longer underground roads under rivers and seas, as well as tunnels in geomorphically
complex terrains, are being opened continuously. Besides the geotechnical difficulty of these infrastructures, the
consumption of their lighting installations in terms of energy and raw materials due to the high number of
projectors, total cost and maintenance, are a major concern between public administrations in many countries.
In this scenario, there is an especially critical kind of tunnels due to their high energy consumption: the groups of
tunnels under very near mountains, that is grouped tunnels separated by opencast roads with lengths about few
hundred meters. Due to the special characteristics of the human visual adaptation, whenever one driver leaves
one tunnel during daytime (when most displacements take place), his visual system loses adaptation to darker
environments, and needs a new threshold zone with high luminance levels when entering a new tunnel even if it
begins in just a few meters. This converts grouped tunnels in paradoxical infrastructures: the cost of their lighting
installations is much higher than if there were only one tunnel going under the whole mountains chain. In this
work, it is proposed an optical coupling of grouped tunnels with translucent red structures to avoid the loss of
visual adaptation to weakly illuminated environments and the consequent high demands of lighting levels. The
savings with of proposal are presented and compared with the current situation in the groups of tunnels around
the world.