An evaluation of the thermal protective clothing used by six Australian fire brigades

Similar documents
School of Health Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia. Contact person:

The effects of protective clothing on metabolic rate

Interaction effects of radiation and convection measured by a thermal manikin wearing protective clothing with different radiant properties

Testing Services for the Evaluation of. Fabric Systems, Clothing Systems, Sleeping Bag Systems, Bedding Systems, and Personal Cooling Systems (PCS)

Contact person:

8/2016. Protective clothing for firefighters TIGER MATRIX. 3rd category of Personal Protective Clothing

Development of Empirical Equations to Predict Sweating Skin Surface Temperature for Thermal Manikins in Warm Environments.

Heat Balance When Wearing Protective Clothing

Impact of local clothing values on local skin temperature simulation

Introduction. Procurement options. Managed services. The selection process. Compatibility and sizing

A Comparison of Two Methods of Determining Thermal Properties of Footwear

NTC Project S02-CD01 (formerly I02-E01)

Comfort of Clothing. Rajesh Mishra & Jiri Militky Technical University of Liberec Liberec, Czech Republic

Influence of Undergarment Structure on the Parameters of the Microclimate under Hermetic Protective Clothing

Room Climate Standard. Thomas Wolf, CSES

SCRUB SUITS VS CLEAN AIR SUITS A THERMAL PROPERTIES COMPARISON

Clothing insulation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Supporting Material for TIA 1105 (2112)

Assessment of Hypothermia Blankets Using an Advanced Thermal Manikin John P. Rugh 1* and Khalid Barazanji 2

EVALUATION OF PHYSIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF THE FIRST LAYER GARMENT FOR SPORT APPAREL

The comparison of thermal properties of protective clothing using dry and sweating manikins

A Comparative Introduction on Sweating Thermal Manikin Newton and Walter

Healthy Buildings 2017 Europe July 2-5, 2017, Lublin, Poland

FORCED VENTILATION OF PROTECTIVE GARMENTS FOR HOT INDUSTRIES. J.A. Gonzalez, L.G. Berglund, T.L. Endrusick*, M.A. Kolka

Measurement Method for the Solar Absorptance of a Standing Clothed Human Body

Experimental Heated, Breathing and Sweating Manikins. Integrating radiant. Fatigue Lab constructs the. losses. military use. of human body heat

Investigation into Fit, Distribution and Size of Air Gaps in Fire-Fighter Jackets to Female Body Form

Effect of Hair Style on Human Physiological Responses in a Hot Environment

Webinar December 8, 2015

Press information. All wrapped up. Warm outer layers for cold days. 22-Jan EN

THE ERGONOMIC FACTORS: A STUDY ON ACTIVE WEAR. Kushanee Jayasinghe, 2 Niromi Seram. 2

ALU-SAFE HAS BEEN TESTED AGAINST THE FOLLOWING STANDARDS: Full technical details and further information can be found at

Special textiles are the ideal solution for effective protection against harmful UV radiation. Hohenstein Institute

2.2 Body protection consists of torso, hand, head, respiratory and foot protection.

Professor Alan Hedge, Cornell University 1/22

Indigenous Australia's diverse memorialisation of the dead

CLI MATE PROTECTION SYSTE M S

Simulation of perspiration in sweating fabric manikin-walter

Dräger Oxy 3000/6000 Self Contained Self Rescuer

Disposable Apparel Performance and Selection Guide

FIRE MAX 3. Next generation protection and wearing comfort.

* Nara Women's University, Nara, Japan Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, Lo&, Poland

e ISSN Open Access -

OPTIMIZATION OF MILITARY GARMENT FIT

FR Clothing. Don Mossman

INTRODUCING NOMEX LIMITEDWEAR

INFRA- STRUCTURE C LOT H ING S Y STEM S F O R TH E TO U GHEST CH A LLEN G ES

Heat stress in chemical protective clothing: porosity and vapour resistance

Fibres Retention Time on Different Type of Recipient Garments

Scalpel safety : Modeling the effectiveness of different safety devices ability to reduce scalpel blade injuries

International Journal of Fiber and Textile Research. ISSN Original Article NEW POSSIBILITIES IN KHADI DESIGNING

Published in: Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Environmental Ergonomics

INVESTIGATION OF HEAD COVERING AND THERMAL COMFORT IN RADIANT COOLING MALAYSIAN OFFICES

American Firewear. Super Hoods...The Hood Every Firefighter Will Want to Wear.

MILITARY TEXTILE MATERIALS FOR EXTREME WEATHER CONDITIONS

Performance Study of Protective Clothing against Hot Water Splashes: from Bench Scale Test to Instrumented Manikin Test

This document is a preview generated by EVS

Improvement of Grease Leakage Prevention for Ball Bearings Due to Geometrical Change of Ribbon Cages

Wearing Effectiveness of the Nowire Mold-Bressiere Design

Biomedical Research 2018; Special Issue: ISSN X Study on the effect of professional sports clothing on sports physiology.

The Use of 3D Anthropometric Data for Morphotype Analysis to Improve Fit and Grading Techniques The Results

The interaction of clothing. ventilation with dry and evaporative heat transfer of jackets: the effect of air and. vapor permeability

LIGHTER WEIGHT MORE WARMTH ENHANCED FLEXIBILITY. A New Generation of Flame Resistant Outerwear Fabrics

Services for Personal Protective Equipment Testing and certification

FR Disposable Clothing Guide

The E ects of Wind and Human Movement on the Heat and Vapour Transfer Properties of Clothing

Interaction of clothing and thermoregulation

The effects of protective. clothing and its properties on energy consumption during different activities: literature review

Inspired by your comfort, driven by innovation.

ISO INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

Testing Cold Protection According to EN ISO 20344: Is There Any Professional Footwear that Does Not Pass?

About Hainsworth Royal Flying Corps formed in the UK distinctive blue uniform supplied by Hainsworth.

SBS5225 HVACR I Thermal Comfort. Ir. Dr. Sam C. M. Hui Faculty of Science and Technology

SAFETY DATA SHEET SANSOL

Performance of Protective Clothing: Global Needs and Emerging Markets: 8 th Symposium

The Role of Tests and Manikin in Defining Fabrics Thermal Characteristics

C. J. Schwarz Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science, Simon Fraser University December 27, 2013.

Bristol Motorcycle Suit

Safety Data Sheet 1. IDENTIFICATION 2. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION

MODAPTS. Modular. Arrangement of. Predetermined. Time Standards. International MODAPTS Association

Defense Technical Information Center Compilation Part Notice

SAFETY DATA SHEET according to 1907/2006/EC, Article 31

Healthy Buildings 2017 Europe July 2-5, 2017, Lublin, Poland. Local air gap thickness model for realistic simulation of thermal effects in clothing

Research Article Artificial Neural Network Estimation of Thermal Insulation Value of Children s School Wear in Kuwait Classroom

Determination of the Air Gap Thickness underneath the Garment for Lower Body Using 3D Body Scanning

FIRE-SAFE STRUCTURAL GARMENTS FIRE-SAFE BUSH FIRE GARMENTS. Hard working, light weight garments for increased mobility and reduced heat stress.

International Efficacy Survey

Non-evaporative effects of a wet mid layer on heat transfer through protective clothing

Minimising formaldehyde exposure through substitution of resins

Chapman Ranch Lint Cleaner Brush Evaluation Summary of Fiber Quality Data "Dirty" Module 28 September 2005 Ginning Date

3M Scotchlite. Reflective Material. You wouldn t BE SEEN. in anything else

NON-Hazardous Substance, NON-Dangerous Goods

Methods Improvement for Manual Packaging Process

08/2016. Protective clothing. NOMEX underwear. Personal Protective equipment of category II

Dressings Range Healthcare Ltd

CCS Administrative Procedure T Biosafety for Laboratory Settings

Non-Formaldehyde Wrinkle Resistant Finishing on Silk Fabric with Polycarboxylic Acids

SAFETY DATA SHEET. Section 1: IDENTIFICATION RESOLVE. Recommended Use: Heavy duty detergent and sanitiser. Product Code: (3x5L)

Effects of Biodegrade Pesticide

EyeLocc. Eyelid Occlusion Dressings

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive) Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health 2009 An evaluation of the thermal protective clothing used by six Australian fire brigades Pete Kerry University of Wollongong, pjk51@uow.edu.au Anne van den Heuvel University of Wollongong, avdh@uow.edu.au Martin van Dijk University of Maastricht Gregory E. Peoples University of Wollongong, peoples@uow.edu.au Nigel A.S. Taylor University of Wollongong, ntaylor@uow.edu.au Publication Details Kerry, P., van den Heuvel, A., van Dijk, M., Peoples, G. E. & Taylor, N. A.S.. An evaluation of the thermal protective clothing used by six Australian fire brigades. Environmental ergonomics XIII: Proceedings of the 13th international conference on environmental ergonomics; Wollongong, Australia: University of Wollongong; 2009. 44-48. Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

An evaluation of the thermal protective clothing used by six Australian fire brigades Abstract Individuals working in hot environments experience an increase in body core temperature due to the combined influences of physical activity, which elevates metabolic heat production, and external heat sources, which impede heat loss. Since dry heat exchanges are dependent upon thermal gradients, then hotter environments restrict heat dissipation, particularly when the air temperature approaches and exceeds that of the skin. Heat loss will now become progressively more reliant upon the evaporation of sweat, which is also gradient dependent. Keywords clothing, used, six, australian, evaluation, fire, thermal, brigades, protective Disciplines Arts and Humanities Life Sciences Medicine and Health Sciences Social and Behavioral Sciences Publication Details Kerry, P., van den Heuvel, A., van Dijk, M., Peoples, G. E. & Taylor, N. A.S.. An evaluation of the thermal protective clothing used by six Australian fire brigades. Environmental ergonomics XIII: Proceedings of the 13th international conference on environmental ergonomics; Wollongong, Australia: University of Wollongong; 2009. 44-48. This conference paper is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/hbspapers/184

AN EVALUATION OF THE THERMAL PROTECTIVE CLOTHING USED BY SIX AUSTRALIAN FIRE BRIGADES. Pete Kerry, Anne M.J. van den Heuvel, Martin van Dijk, Gregory E. Peoples and Nigel A.S. Taylor School of Health Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia Contact person: nigel_taylor@uow.edu.au INTRODUCTION Individuals working in hot environments experience an increase in body core temperature due to the combined influences of physical activity, which elevates metabolic heat production, and external heat sources, which impede heat loss. Since dry heat exchanges are dependent upon thermal gradients, then hotter environments restrict heat dissipation, particularly when the air temperature approaches and exceeds that of the skin. Heat loss will now become progressively more reliant upon the evaporation of sweat, which is also gradient dependent. The thermal protective clothing worn by firefighters represents a significant impost upon body temperature regulation, and this occurs via two primary avenues. First, clothing modifies the ease with which heat is transferred between the body and the environment. It does this by providing thermal insulation (trapped air), which can be advantageous in thermally dangerous environments, but disadvantageous when individuals are working hard and producing a significant amount of metabolic heat. Second, the vapour (moisture) permeability of the garment is important (Goldman, 1994). This is the ability of the fabric to allow water vapour to pass through, thereby facilitating evaporation at the skin surface. Clothing impedes evaporation, and this has a critical impact upon thermal comfort and body temperature regulation (Candas, 2002). The impact of these influences is a function of the properties of the fabrics used to manufacture the complete ensemble. Some fabrics are designed to allow water vapour, but not water droplets to pass through, while others are completely impermeable, and have been designed to protect the user from chemical, biological and radiological agents. Recently, Australian manufacturers have started to incorporate moisture barriers within some forms of thermal protective clothing. The logic behind the use of these barriers has been two-fold. Such barriers were first thought to reduce the risk of steam burns in firefighters, and it was also assumed that vapour-permeable barriers would facilitate the evaporation of sweat from the skin surface by facilitating water vapour transfer down a water-vapour gradient. In the first instance, it was been assumed by some, perhaps incorrectly, that steam (scald) burns originated from super-heated, external moisture penetrating the ensemble. A moisture barrier will help prevent water penetration, and may have some protective function, if in fact such penetration played a causal role in steam burns. It has also been assumed that vapour-permeable, but moisture impermeable fabrics may enhance the evaporation and removal of sweat. However, at an external air temperature of 35 o C, and a water vapour pressure of 5.06 kpa (relative humidity 90% ), there will be a 90% reduction in water vapour transfer through a vapour permeable fabric. Since the physiological and psychological consequences of heat strain are well established, it is in the best interests of firefighters to be provided with protective clothing that not only affords optimal thermal protection, but also facilitates the greatest loss of metabolically generated heat. 44

The current project was designed to evaluate the physiological consequences of these problems, but within a controlled-laboratory environment, whilst focussing upon variations in physiological strain that may exist whilst wearing different protective ensembles, with and without moisture barriers, during work-simulated exercise and recovery periods. METHODS This project involved intermittent, steady-state and incremental exercise (total: 120 min) within a climate chamber (30.5 o C (±0.6), 38.1% humidity (±1.4)). Subjects performed work simulations, with seated rest, to replicate the metabolic demands of activities typically encountered during fire fighting (weighted box stepping, treadmill dummy drag, treadmill walking carrying hose, incremental treadmill walk/run to 85% maximal). Eight subjects performed nine separate work simulations (72 trials) wearing two types of garments: thermal protective ensembles (six options: Table 1, Figure 1) and station (duty) wear (three options: Figure 2; Kerry et al., 2009). Table 1: General specifications of the thermal protective clothing. Ensemble Fabric description Heat transfer HTI24 (sec) Heat transfer T2 (sec) 1 2 3 4 Outer shell: PBI Gold Thermal liner: not applicable Moisture barrier: Gore Airlock Outer shell: Nomex Delta C Thermal liner: Sontara * 2 Moisture barrier: not applicable Inner liner: Nomex/FR viscose Outer shell: Nomex Advanced Thermal liner: not applicable Moisture barrier: Gore Fireblocker Outer shell: Nomex IIID Thermal liner: not applicable Moisture barrier: Gore Airlock 19 24.9 17 22.0 19 23.9 21 25.7 5 Outer shell: Kermel Roano Thermal liner: Sontara * 2 Moisture barrier: not applicable Not tested Not tested 6 Outer shell: Nomex IIID Thermal liner: Sontara * 2 Moisture barrier: not applicable 18 24.4 The thermal protective and duty wear ensembles were selected so that the textile assemblies were typical of those worn by members of six different Australian State fire brigades. These ensembles were then assembled by a single manufacturer to fit each subject, and to match the 45

configuration and design specifications of the NSW Fire Brigades, but using the textile assembly and layer specifications of the other State brigades. Each ensemble was then cleaned five times before being used. Duty wear was not worn when the personal protective ensembles were tested, and the duty wear trials were completed without the personal protective ensembles. Figure 1: Six thermal protective ensembles (left): options one, three and four have moisture barriers. Figure 2: Duty or daily station wear clothing (below). This design provided separate evaluations of the different ensemble components, which could then be combined to provide the best combination for field use. In every trial, the standard-issue helmet (1.18 kg), flash hood and gloves were worn. Self-contained breathing apparatus, with an empty cylinder, was also worn (total mass: 14.26 kg). The mask of the breathing apparatus was used, but was disconnected from the cylinder, thus avoiding the complication of changing and recharging air cylinders. Trials were conducted in a fully balanced order across subjects, such that no two subjects were tested wearing ensembles in the same sequence. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION The protocol required subjects to exercise at an average oxygen consumption of 1.61 L.min -1. The average maximal core temperature across all trials was 37.8 o C (highest: 38.9 o C), with the mean core temperature change being 1.36 o C, and an average maximal heart rate of 131.0 b.min -1. This corresponded to 67% of the age-predicted maximal heart rate for these subjects. On average, and across all trials, these subjects lost 1.06 kg of sweat (0.56 L.h -1 ). 46

Differences among the duty wear ensembles were not significant, and are not reported here. However, a number of statistically significant, between-ensemble differences were observed among the thermal protective ensembles, both within and across the physiological and psychophysical indices investigated. These outcomes are summarised in Table 2. Of the twenty-three occasions where statistically significant differences were identified, the ensembles that included moisture barriers (one, three, four) were inferior to those that had no moisture barrier in twenty-two instances. Thus, such ensembles were associated with a more adverse psychophysiological impact upon the wearer. We have previously demonstrated this to be the case in another experiment in which these moisture barriers formed an integral part of the protective ensemble (van den Heuvel et al., 2007). Furthermore, and with only one statistically significant exception, the ensembles containing moisture barriers did not differ from one another. Table 2: Statistical summary. Significantly superior ensembles are indicated with S ; significantly inferior ensembles are shown using x. Subscript numbers indicate ensemble option codes (1-6) for which differences were statistically significant. Since several analyses were completed for each variable (peak, whole trial, during work, during recovery, terminal), rows can contain more than one entry. Personal protective ensembles Variable Option 1 Option 2 Option 3 Option 4 Option 5 Option 6 Core temperature x 2 S 1,3,5,6 x 2 S 1,3 S 1 x 2 S 5 Skin temperature S 4 Heart rate S 1 S 1 S 2 S 2 Sweat loss x 2 Sweat evaporation x 2 x 4 Thermal sensation x 2 Thermal Discomfort x 4 S 4 47

Conversely, the ensembles without moisture barriers (options two, five, six) were significantly superior on twenty-two occasions. The vast majority of these differences occurred between the ensembles with and without moisture barriers, and the following points relate to these observations. Ensemble five was found to be statistically superior on twelve occasions, with this occurring seven times with respect to option six, and four times relative to option two. Option six had one occasion where it performed statistically better than options two and five. Option two was statistically superior to option five only once. On the basis of core temperatures measured during each trial, two protective ensembles stood out as being statistically superior (options five and six), whilst two other ensembles were statistically inferior (options one and three). From observations of mean skin temperature, mean body temperature and heart rate, ensemble option five was found to be statistically superior on twelve occasions, with this occurring seven times for option six and four times for option two. Thermal protective ensemble option three was associated with statistically greater sweat loss (relative to option two), and moisture accumulation within the clothing (relative to options two and four). Finally, for thermal sensation, ensemble option three performed statistically poorer than option two, while for thermal discomfort, option four performed statistically poorer than option five. CONCLUSIONS On the basis of these observations, it was recommended that thermal protective ensembles five, six and two (in that order) be considered least likely to adversely affect the psychophysiological status of firefighters during operational use. Conversely, it was considered that ensemble option three would place firefighters under significantly greater strain. REFERENCES Candas, V. (2002). To be or not to be comfortable: basis and prediction. In: Tochihara, Y. (Editor). Environmental Ergonomics X. Fukuoka, Japan. ISBN: 4-9901358-0-6. Pp. 795-800. Goldman, R.F. (1994). Heat stress in industrial protective encapsulating garments. In: Martin, W.F. and Levine, S.P. Protecting personnel at hazardous waste sites. Butterworth-Heinemann, Boston. Pp. 258-315. Kerry, P., van den Heuvel, A.M.J., van Dijk, M., Peoples, G.E., and Taylor, N.A.S. (2009). Personal protective ensembles for firefighters: an evaluation of metabolic heat loss from Australian ensembles. UOW-HPL- Report-034. Human Performance Laboratories, University of Wollongong. For: NSW Fire Brigades, Sydney, Australia. Pp. 1-55. van den Heuvel, A.M.J., Caldwell, J.N., Verhagen, S., and Taylor, N.A.S. (2007). Heat storage in fire fighting personal protective ensembles with and without moisture barriers. UOW-HPL-Report-025. Human Performance Laboratories, University of Wollongong. For: Metropolitan Fire and Emergency Services Board, Melbourne, Australia. Pp. 1-49. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT This project was fully supported through equal contributions from the New South Wales Fire Brigades (Sydney, NSW, Australia) and the clothing manufacturer CTE Pty. Ltd. (West Footscray, VIC, Australia). 48