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Effect of Different Fabric Skin Combinations on Predicted Sweating Skin Temperature of a Thermal Manikin

Author

Summary, in English

In this study, a knit cotton fabric skin and a Gore-tex skin were used to simulate two sweating methods. The Gore-tex skin was put on top of the pre-wetted knit cotton skin on a dry heated thermal manikin 'Tore' to simulate senseless sweating, similar to thermal manikins 'Coppelius' and 'Walter'. Another simulation involved the pre-wetted fabric skin covered on top of the Gore-tex skin in order to simulate sensible sweating. This type of sweating simulation can be widely found on many thermal manikins worldwide, e.g. 'Newton'. Two empirical equations to predict the wet skin surface temperature were developed based on the mean manikin surface temperature, mean fabric skin surface temperature and the total heat loss. The prediction equations for the senseless sweating and sensible sweating on the thermal manikin 'Tore' were T-sk=34.05-0.0193HL and T-sk=34.63-0.0178HL, respectively. It was found that the Gore-tex skin limits moisture evaporation and the predicted fabric skin temperature was greater than that in the G+C skin combination. Further study should validate those two empirical equations, however.

Publishing year

2010

Language

English

Pages

184-186

Publication/Series

Proceedings Of The Second International Conference On Advanced Textile Materials & Manufacturing Technology

Document type

Conference paper

Publisher

Zhejiang University Press

Topic

  • Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Keywords

  • Empirical equation
  • Skin temperature
  • Thermal manikin
  • Sweating skin

Conference name

2nd International Conference on Advanced Textile Materials & Manufacturing Technology

Conference date

2010-10-20 - 2010-10-24

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-7-308-07958-7