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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Thermal Environment Assessment Reliability Using Temperature —Humidity Indices

TLDR
Results show that Humidex index very often leads to the underestimation of the workplace dangerousness and a poor reliability of comfort prediction when it is used in indoor situations.
Abstract
A reliable assessment of the thermal environment should take into account the whole of the six parameters affecting the thermal sensation (air temperature, air velocity, humidity, mean radiant temperature, metabolic rate and thermo-physical properties of clothing). Anyway, the need of a quick evaluation based on few measurements and calculations has leaded to like best temperature-humidity indices instead of rational methods based on the heat balance on the human body. Among these, Canadian Humidex, preliminarily used only for weather fore- casts, is becoming more and more widespread for a generalized assessment of both outdoor and indoor thermal environments. This custom arouses great controversies since using an index validated in outdoor conditions does not assure its indoor reliability. Moreover is it really pos- sible to carry out the thermal environment assessment ignoring some of variables involved in the physiological response of the human body? Aiming to give a clear answer to these ques- tions, this paper deals with a comparison between the assessment carried out according to the rational methods suggested by International Standards in force and the Humidex index. This combined analysis under hot stress situations (indoor and outdoor) has been preliminarily carried out; in a second phase the study deals with the indoor comfort prediction. Obtained results show that Humidex index very often leads to the underestimation of the workplace dan- gerousness and a poor reliability of comfort prediction when it is used in indoor situations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Outdoor human thermal perception in various climates: A comprehensive review of approaches, methods and quantification.

TL;DR: Examination of the relation between human thermal comfort range and outdoor thermal environment conditions for selective indices in different climatic zones shows that the range of the thermal comfort or dis-comfort is affected by the outdoor thermal environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculating Workplace WBGT from Meteorological Data: A Tool for Climate Change Assessment

TL;DR: Compared published methods to calculate outdoor and indoor WBGT from standard climate data, such as air temperature, dew point temperature, wind speed and solar radiation, and recommend the method of Liljegren et al. (2008) for calculating outdoor WBGT when estimating climate change impacts on occupational heat stress at a population level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outdoor human comfort and thermal stress: A comprehensive review on models and standards

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of available tools for modelling outdoor human comfort and thermal stress is presented, explains the physical equations that drive these models, and shows their applicability based on climate and the findings of previous research.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive catalogue and classification of human thermal climate indices

TL;DR: Here a comprehensive register of 162 thermal indices is assembled and a sorting scheme devised that groups them according to eight primary classification classes, the first stage in a project to organise and evaluate the full range of all human thermal climate indices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outdoor thermal sensation of pedestrians in a Mediterranean climate and a comparison with UTCI

TL;DR: A field questionnaire survey was carried out simultaneously with weather measurements, in three urban areas in Athens, Greece, focusing on individual thermal sensation and its relationship with the environment in Mediterranean climates as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The physiological equivalent temperature - a universal index for the biometeorological assessment of the thermal environment.

TL;DR: The physiological equivalent temperature (PET) is defined as the air temperature at which the heat budget of the human body is balanced with the same core and skin temperature under the complex outdoor conditions to be assessed, and enables a layperson to compare the integral effects of complex thermal conditions outside with his or her own experience indoors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Discomfort Index

E. C. Thom
- 01 Apr 1959 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

The Assessment of Sultriness. Part I: A Temperature-Humidity Index Based on Human Physiology and Clothing Science

TL;DR: In this paper, the relative sultriness of warm-humid and hot-arid summer climates is assessed using the amount of clothing needed to achieve thermal comfort and the reduction in the skin's resistance needed to obtain thermal equilibrium.
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