- Scaling, optimisation, and application of vegetation canopy radiative transfer model at microclimate scale. In: Building Simulation. :
- Evaluation of pedestrian thermal comfort from a whole-trip perspective: An outdoor empirical study. In: Sustainable Cities and Society, v. 115 (November 2024). (2024):
- Health risk assessment of residential overheating under the heat waves in Guangzhou. In: Building and Environment, v. 266 (December 2024). (2024):
- Investigating the potential of street trees in mitigating pedestrian thermal stress during heatwaves conditions: An empirical study in Guangzhou. In: Building and Environment, v. 265 (November 2024). (2024):
- The impact of dynamic thermal experiences on pedestrian thermal comfort: A whole-trip perspective from laboratory studies. In: Building and Environment, v. 258 (June 2024). (2024):
- How to rapidly map outdoor mean radiation temperatures with high-spatial-resolution from UAV-derived multimodal images: A case study in Guangzhou. In: Building and Environment, v. 255 (May 2024). (2024):
- Establishing a link between complex courtyard spaces and thermal comfort: A major advancement in evidence-based design. In: Building and Environment, v. 245 (November 2023). (2023):
- The effect of solar radiation on pedestrian thermal comfort: A climate chamber experiment. In: Building and Environment, v. 245 (November 2023). (2023):
- Multivariate thermal environment data extraction and evaluation: A neighborhood scale case in Guangzhou, China. In: Building and Environment, v. 234 (April 2023). (2023):
- The COMFA model for assessing courtyard thermal comfort in hot and humid regions: A comparative study with existing models. In: Building and Environment, v. 234 (April 2023). (2023):
- Method of spherical triangle-division for solving view factors in built environment and its application for non-uniform thermal radiation environments. In: Building and Environment, v. 222 (August 2022). (2022):
- The characteristics of dynamic and non-uniform thermal radiation experienced by pedestrians in a street canyon. In: Building and Environment, v. 222 (August 2022). (2022):