| Authors | S. Alireza Zolfaghari,Mehdi Maerefat,Jorn Toftum |
| Journal | International Journal of Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration |
| Page number | 1-14 |
| Serial number | 29 |
| Volume number | 2 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2021 |
| Journal Grade | ISI |
| Journal Type | Electronic |
| Journal Country | Iran, Islamic Republic Of |
| Journal Index | Scopus |
Abstract
This paper presents an experimental study that evaluated the e®ects of three di®erent nonuniform
types of clothing ensembles (Type A: short-sleeve shirt, T-shirt underwear, men's briefs,
straight trousers, socks, shoes; Type B: long-sleeve shirt, T-shirt underwear, men's briefs, straight
trousers; and Type C: long-sleeve shirt, men's briefs, straight trousers, thick socks, shoes) with
almost the same thermal insulation (about 0.52 clo) on the subjects' local and overall thermal
sensation and air movement preference under a desktop local ventilation system. The experiment
was conducted in a test chamber with the mean air temperature of 24 0:5C and under three
supply air temperatures of 16C, 24C, and 32C from a desktop ventilation system. The results
revealed that the body segments with the most critical thermal sensation were (i) forearms, hands
and arms for the subjects with \A type" clothing ensemble, (ii) feet, hands and forearms for the
subjects with \B type" clothing ensemble, and (iii) hands, arms, forearms and chest for the
subjects that wore \C type" clothing ensemble. For the three clothing types of \A", \B" and \C",
the values of overall thermal sensation changed from 0.63, 1.25, and 1.13 at 16C to 0.31,
0.31, and 0.38 at 32C inlet temperature, respectively. Also, the results indicated that upon
elevation of the inlet air temperature from 16C to 32C, the percentages of the subjects who
preferred less air movement dropped from 63%, 63%, and 50% to 38%, 25%, and 38%, respectively,
for wearing \A", \B" and \C" clothing ensembles.
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