Effective environmental control and energy efficiency in high technology buildings have become an important subject of investigations across continents since the last decades [1]. Past studies addressed effectiveness of environmental control within high-technology buildings for various applications and cleanliness grades (list five refs on simulations/experiments [2]).
Some studies characterized operational energy use and savings potentials at component, system, or plant level [3–5]. Energy use for the operation of high-technology buildings has been found to be highly intensive compared to commercial buildings, and is an expected cause for intensive emissions of greenhouse gas (GHG) because non-renewable energy source was typically used to generate power supplied to them.