4.4 Article

A study on local cooling of garments with ventilation fans and openings placed at different torso sites

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ERGONOMICS
Volume 43, Issue 3, Pages 232-237

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ergon.2013.01.001

Keywords

Local cooling; Ventilation; Opening; Evaporation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [51106022]
  2. Innovation Program of Shanghai Municipal Education Commission [12ZZ068]
  3. National Social Science Foundation [12DG36]

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The aim of the study was to examine the various design features of ventilated garments on cooling performance. Five jackets with small ventilation units and closable openings were designed. The ventilation units with a flow rate of 12 l/s were placed at five different torso sites. They were examined on a sweating thermal manikin in four clothing opening conditions in a warm environment (T-a = T-manikin = 34 degrees C, RH = 60%, V-a = 0.4 m/s). Total torso cooling was increased by 137-251%, and clothing total dynamic evaporative resistance was decreased by 43-69%. Neither the ventilation location nor the opening design had a significant difference on total torso cooling. The ventilation location had a significant difference on localized intra-torso cooling, but not the opening design. When the ventilation units were placed at the local zone where it was ventilated, that zone underwent the highest cooling than other local zones. The study indicated that the ventilation units should be placed at the region where it required the most evaporative cooling, e.g. along the spine area and the lower back. The openings could be adjusted (closed or opened) to make comfortable air pressure for the wearers but without making significant difference on the whole torso cooling under this flow rate. Relevance to industry: Heat strain is frequently reported in hot environments, especially for those industries, such as construction, mining and steel. Clothing equipped with the small ventilation units could circulate the ambient air around the body and thus decrease heat strain and improve productivity. (c) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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