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Journal ArticleDOI

Single-sector thermophysiological human simulator.

TLDR
The development of a single-sector thermophysiological human simulator, which consists of a sweating heated cylinder 'Torso' coupled with the iesd-Fiala multi-node model of human physiology and thermal comfort, enables overall physiological and comfort responses, health risk and survival conditions to be predicted for adult humans for various scenarios.
Abstract
Thermal sweating manikins are used to analyse the heat and mass transfer phenomena in the skin-clothing-environment system. However, the limiting factor of present thermal manikins is their inability to simulate adequately the human thermal behaviour, which has a significant effect on the clothing microenvironment. A mathematical model of the human physiology was, therefore, incorporated into the system control to simulate human thermoregulatory responses and the perception of thermal comfort over a wide range of environmental and personal conditions. Thereby, the computer model provides the physiological intelligence, while the hardware is used to measure the required calorimetric states relevant to the human heat exchange with the environment. This paper describes the development of a single-sector thermophysiological human simulator, which consists of a sweating heated cylinder 'Torso' coupled with the iesd-Fiala multi-node model of human physiology and thermal comfort. Validation tests conducted for steady-state and, to some extent, transient conditions ranging from cold to hot revealed good agreement with the corresponding experimental results obtained for semi-nude subjects. The new coupled system enables overall physiological and comfort responses, health risk and survival conditions to be predicted for adult humans for various scenarios.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of the physiology of human thermal comfort while exercising in urban landscapes and implications for bioclimatic design

TL;DR: This review comprehensively examines scientific literature pertaining to human physiology during exercise, including mechanisms of heat formation and dissipation, heat stress on the body, the importance of skin temperature monitoring, the effects of clothing, and microclimatic measurements.
OtherDOI

Thermal Indices and Thermophysiological Modeling for Heat Stress

TL;DR: The most commonly used indices and models are discussed and how these are deployed in the different contexts of industrial, military, and biometeorological applications are looked at, with focus on use to predict related thermal sensations, acute risk of heat illness, and epidemiological analysis of morbidity and mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Materials used to simulate physical properties of human skin

TL;DR: For many applications in research, material development and testing, physical skin models are preferable to the use of human skin, because more reliable and reproducible results can be obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermophysiological models and their applications:a review

TL;DR: A review of existing thermophysiological models for the whole body and isolated body segments is presented in this paper, where the development from simple to more complex models is shown, and most recognized thermal models such as Fiala, Berkeley Comfort Model, Tanabe, and ThermoSem model are concisely described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Personal cooling garments: a review

TL;DR: In this article, a brief look at the human thermoregulation and its relation with the cooling garments, classification of the personal cooling garments and testing procedures, and parameters affecting the efficiency of cooling garments are discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A computer model of human thermoregulation for a wide range of environmental conditions: the passive system.

TL;DR: A dynamic model predicting human thermal responses in cold, cool, neutral, warm, and hot environments is presented in a two-part study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer prediction of human thermoregulatory and temperature responses to a wide range of environmental conditions

TL;DR: Good general agreement with measured data was obtained for regulatory responses, internal temperatures, and the mean and local skin temperatures of unacclimatised humans for the whole spectrum of climatic conditions and for different activity levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

A model of human physiology and comfort for assessing complex thermal environments

TL;DR: The Berkeley comfort model as mentioned in this paper is based on the Stolwijk model of human thermal regulation but includes several signi/cant improvements, such as allowing an unlimited body segments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of thermal comfort using combined multi-node thermoregulation (65MN) and radiation models and computational fluid dynamics (CFD)

TL;DR: In this paper, the Stolwijk model was used to develop a 65-node thermoregulation model with 16 body segments corresponding to the thermal manikin, each consisting of four layers for core, muscle, fat and skin.
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