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Journal Article

Citation

Holmér I, Nilsson H, Bohm M, Norén O. Appl. Human Sci. 1995; 14(4): 159-165.

Affiliation

National Institute of Occupational Health, Solna, Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Japan Society of Physiological Anthropology)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7493249

Abstract

The combined thermal effects of convection, radiation and conduction in a vehicle compartment need special measuring equipment accounting for spatial and temporal variations in the driver space. The most sophisticated equipment measures local heat fluxes at defined spots or areas of a man-shaped manikin. Manikin segment heat fluxes have been measured in a variety of vehicle climatic conditions (heat, cold, solar radiation etc.) and compared with thermal sensation votes and physiological responses of subjects exposed to the same conditions. High correlation was found for segment fluxes and mean thermal vote (MTV) of subjects for the same body segments. By calibrating the manikin under homogenous, wind still conditions, heat fluxes could be converted (and normalised) to an equivalent homogenous temperature (EHT). Regression of MTV-values on EHT-values was used as basis for the derivation of a comfort profile, specifying acceptable temperature ranges for 19 different body segments. The method has been used for assessment of the thermal climate in trucks and crane cabins in winter and summer conditions. The possibility for spatial resolution of thermal influences (e.g. by solar radiation or convection currents) appeared to be very useful in the analysis of system performance. Ventilation of driver's seats is a technical solution to reducing insulation of thigh, seat and back areas of the body. Constructions, however, may vary in efficiency. In one system seat ventilation allowed for almost 2 degrees C higher ambient conditions for unchanged general thermal sensation, in addition to the pronounced local effect. In a recent study the effects of various technical measures related to cabin design and HVAC-systems have been investigated. Quantitative data on the effects of, for example, heated windows, heated floor, air outlet positions and solar screens have been obtained. KW: climate, thermal comfort, thermal sensation, hyperthermia in automobiles.


KW: Hyperthermia in automobiles


Language: en

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