4.5 Article

Effects of liquid cooling garment on physiological and psychological strain of firefighter in hot and warm environments

Journal

JOURNAL OF THERMAL BIOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103487

Keywords

Liquid cooling garment; Firefighter; Personal protective clothing; Physiological strain; Psychological strain

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This study investigated the effects of a liquid cooling garment on the physiological and psychological strains experienced by firefighters. Human trials were conducted with twelve participants wearing firefighting protective equipment, either with or without the liquid cooling garment. The results showed that the liquid cooling garment significantly reduced mean skin temperature, scapula skin temperature, sweating loss, and physiological strain index, while having little influence on core temperature, heart rate, and psychological parameters. The study suggests that psychological strain can be a predictor of physiological heat strain.
This study aimed to explore the effects of a liquid cooling garment on the physiological and psychological strains of firefighters. Twelve participants wearing firefighting protective equipment with the liquid cooling garment (LCG group) and without the liquid cooling garment (CON group) were recruited to conduct human trials in a climate chamber. During the trials, physiological parameters (mean skin temperature (Tsk), core temperature (Tc), and heart rate (HR)) and psychological parameters (thermal sensation vote (TSV), thermal comfort vote (TCV), and rating of perceived exertion (RPE)) were measured continuously. The heat storage, sweating loss, physiological strain index (PSI), and perceptual strain index (PeSI) were calculated. The results indicated that the liquid cooling garment decreased the mean skin temperature (maximum value of 0.62 degrees C), scapula skin tem-perature (maximum value of 1.90 degrees C), sweating loss (26%), and PSI (0.95 scales) with a significant difference (p < 0.05) at some time points when compared with the CON group. Moreover, the liquid cooling garment had little influence (p > 0.05) on core temperature, heart rate, TSV, TCV, RPE, and PeSI. The association analysis indicated that psychological strain had the potential to predict physiological heat strain with an R2 value of 0.86 between the PeSI and PSI. This study offers insights into the evaluation of cooling system performance, the design of next-generation cooling systems, and the improvement of firefighters' benefits.

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