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Silvia Vilčeková

Researcher at Technical University of Košice

Publications -  92
Citations -  691

Silvia Vilčeková is an academic researcher from Technical University of Košice. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental impact assessment & Embodied energy. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 84 publications receiving 456 citations.

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Life Cycle Assessment and Economic Energy Efficiency of a Solar Thermal Installation in a Family House

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model twelve solar water heating systems created on the roof of the household and analyze the potential energy performance of auxiliary heating and the energy output of the solar thermal installation.
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Environmental impacts assessment for conversion of an old mill building into a modern apartment building through reconstruction

TL;DR: In this article, an old mill building was selected to illustrate the significance of its reconstruction into a residential building underline the architecture of the reconstructed building while retaining the original characters and to analyze its life cycle.
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Assessing the effect of indoor environmental quality on productivity at office work

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the effect of a single parameter on human productivity, mostly because many of them are present at the same time and act together on each occupant, and the mean values of total volatile organic compounds were in line with those found in other studies; taking into account the guideline value suggested by Molhave (200 μg.m-3).
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Investigation of a Ventilation System for Energy Efficiency and Indoor Environmental Quality in a Renovated Historical Building: A Case Study.

TL;DR: The results of indoor environmental quality testing show that the mean relative humidity is in the permissible range (30%–70%) and the mean CO2 concentration is above the recommended value of 1000 ppm according to Pettenkofer; and a very large positive correlation is found between relative humidity and concentration of CO2.
Book ChapterDOI

Indoor Nitrogen Oxides

TL;DR: Chao et al. as discussed by the authors found that personal exposure to NO2 was significantly greater in winter than in summer, and respondents living in smaller houses and/or having outdoor occupations were exposed to higher NO2 levels, and showed that the season of the year, house size and outdoor occupation could significantly influence exposure as well as factors such as the type of fuel used and the ambient air quality level.