4.7 Article

Numerical simulation of the human thermophysiological responses with a liquid circulating garment: Experimental validation and parametric study

Journal

ENERGY AND BUILDINGS
Volume 271, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.enbuild.2022.112332

Keywords

Liquid circulating garment; Numerical model; Thermophysiological responses; Subjective responses; Thermal comfort management; Personal cooling

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
  2. MOE (Ministry of Education in China) Project of Humanities and Social Sciences
  3. [2021M691281]
  4. [20YJCZH063]

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This study comprehensively investigated the design factors of liquid circulating garments (LCG) and found that clothing insulation, pipe length, and cooling mode significantly impact heat stress alleviation, offering helpful guidelines for better thermal comfort and energy-saving strategies in hot environments.
Liquid circulating garments (LCG) can effectively alleviate the heat strain of people in hot environments. This work used a human thermoregulatory model integrated with a thermal and comfort model to com-prehensively study the design factors of LCG. The model was firstly validated by human trials and showed good simulation performance in predicting both thermophysiological and subjective responses with LCG in a hot temperature. Then a numerical parametric study was performed to examine the effect of inlet water temperature, clothing insulation, pipe length, and cooling mode on cooling performance under dif-ferent hot environments. The results indicate that the comfortable inlet water temperatures are 22, 19, and 16 degrees C under 30, 34, and 38 degrees C environments, respectively for a standing person wearing an LCG with thermal insulation of 1.0 clo and water pipe length of 8 m. Higher clothing insulation is beneficial for reducing the core and skin temperatures in very hot environments (i.e., 38 degrees C). The pipe length has a sig-nificant impact on the cooling performance. Furthermore, compared to the continuous cooling mode, intermittent cooling in high frequency (i.e., time cycle period = 5 min) can mitigate the heat stress of wearers with less energy consumption. The study could provide a helpful guideline for designing LCG to offer better thermal comfort and energy-saving strategies for people in hot environments. (c) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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