Methods for protective clothing evaluation
(2000) Ergonomics of Protective Clothing. NOKOBETEF 6, The 1st European Conference on Protective Clothing (ECPC1) p.179-182- Abstract
- The international Technical report , ISO/TR 11079, will soon be due for revision. The report suggests that thermal insulation values from a moving thermal manikin can be used to match requirements specified by the IREQ-method. It is known from prior work that insulation values measured with human subjects can be reduced by up to 70 % from the value measured on a standing thermal manikin.
This paper deals with how the wind and walk reduction can be used for evaluation of work clothing with the modified IREQ method. The modified method has been used to evaluate three different ensembles that will be used by Swedish police on the Øresund bridge between Sweden and Denmark.
Results from calculations at different metabolic... (More) - The international Technical report , ISO/TR 11079, will soon be due for revision. The report suggests that thermal insulation values from a moving thermal manikin can be used to match requirements specified by the IREQ-method. It is known from prior work that insulation values measured with human subjects can be reduced by up to 70 % from the value measured on a standing thermal manikin.
This paper deals with how the wind and walk reduction can be used for evaluation of work clothing with the modified IREQ method. The modified method has been used to evaluate three different ensembles that will be used by Swedish police on the Øresund bridge between Sweden and Denmark.
Results from calculations at different metabolic rates, wind speeds and temperatures are presented and compared with values measured on a thermal manikin. A new set of equations makes it possible to calculate the reduction of different activities and weather situations for most winter work clothing, if the static clothing insulation is known from manikin measurements or tables. To validate these relationships more measurements on subjects exposed to wind and motion in working life are needed.
The Swedish Council for Work Life Research and The Swedish National Police Board has supported this work. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/709650
- author
- Nilsson, Håkan O. ; Anttonen, Hannu and Holmér, Ingvar LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2000
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Arbete och hälsa
- editor
- Kuklane, Kalev and Holmér, Ingvar
- issue
- 2000:8
- pages
- 4 pages
- publisher
- National Institute for Working Life
- conference name
- Ergonomics of Protective Clothing. NOKOBETEF 6, The 1st European Conference on Protective Clothing (ECPC1)
- conference location
- Norra Latin, Stockholm, Sweden
- conference dates
- 2000-05-07 - 2000-05-10
- ISSN
- 0346-7821
- ISBN
- 91-7045-559-7
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 99c9f106-f735-417d-8877-e4a5788c8bff (old id 709650)
- alternative location
- http://hdl.handle.net/2077/4246
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 17:00:50
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 20:45:57
@inproceedings{99c9f106-f735-417d-8877-e4a5788c8bff, abstract = {{The international Technical report , ISO/TR 11079, will soon be due for revision. The report suggests that thermal insulation values from a moving thermal manikin can be used to match requirements specified by the IREQ-method. It is known from prior work that insulation values measured with human subjects can be reduced by up to 70 % from the value measured on a standing thermal manikin.<br/><br> This paper deals with how the wind and walk reduction can be used for evaluation of work clothing with the modified IREQ method. The modified method has been used to evaluate three different ensembles that will be used by Swedish police on the Øresund bridge between Sweden and Denmark.<br/><br> Results from calculations at different metabolic rates, wind speeds and temperatures are presented and compared with values measured on a thermal manikin. A new set of equations makes it possible to calculate the reduction of different activities and weather situations for most winter work clothing, if the static clothing insulation is known from manikin measurements or tables. To validate these relationships more measurements on subjects exposed to wind and motion in working life are needed.<br/><br> The Swedish Council for Work Life Research and The Swedish National Police Board has supported this work.}}, author = {{Nilsson, Håkan O. and Anttonen, Hannu and Holmér, Ingvar}}, booktitle = {{Arbete och hälsa}}, editor = {{Kuklane, Kalev and Holmér, Ingvar}}, isbn = {{91-7045-559-7}}, issn = {{0346-7821}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{2000:8}}, pages = {{179--182}}, publisher = {{National Institute for Working Life}}, title = {{Methods for protective clothing evaluation}}, url = {{http://hdl.handle.net/2077/4246}}, year = {{2000}}, }