4.7 Article

Assessing heat stress relief measures to enhance outdoor thermal comfort: A field study in China's cold region

Journal

SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
Volume 80, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2022.103813

Keywords

Outdoor thermal comfort (OTC); Mist spraying system; Shade; Physiological responses; Predictive model; China 's cold region

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51708451]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2452021156]

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This study investigated the effectiveness of heat stress relief measures (shade, mist spraying, and shade+mist) on enhancing outdoor thermal comfort. The findings showed that mist spraying and shade were effective in improving thermal comfort, with mist spraying having a greater cooling effect. Shade+mist provided the widest thermal comfort range. The study also found that the mean skin temperature decreased with the implementation of these cooling strategies.
We recruited 72 healthy college students on a university campus in Xi'an, China to investigate the effectiveness of heat stress relief measures (shade, mist spraying and shade+mist) on enhancing outdoor thermal comfort. Using the Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) and mean skin temperature (MST), we evaluated respondents' thermal and physiological responses. We found that: 1) Mist spraying and shade were effective in improving respondents' outdoor thermal comfort. The cooling effect of mist spraying was more effective than shade, while shade+mist provided a wider thermal comfort range. 2) UTCI declined among cooling strategies by 12.31 ?& nbsp;(shade+mist), 8.03 ?& nbsp;(mist spraying) and 3.48 ?& nbsp;(shade) on average. 3) Shade and mist caused similar cooling effects on skin temperature (ST), but MST plateaued 5 min after exposure to these cooling environments in isolation. Shade+mist provided the greatest cooling effect with MST continuing to drop as the exposure continued. 4) Predictive models showed that MST in shade, mist spraying and shade+mist decreased 0.24, 0.21 and 0.16 ?, respectively when air temperature (T-a) declined 1 ?& nbsp;with constant relative humidity (RH) and mean radiation temperature (T-mrt). MST in shade, mist spraying and shade+mist decreased 0.05, 0.08 and 0.06 ?, respectively where RH increased 1% with constant Ta and T-mrt.

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