Climate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Climate

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Usually not a problem in office buildings, but ... Carbon dioxide may be limiting. ... Avoid contact with cold metal. Drink fluids to prevent dehydration. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Climate


1
Climate
  • Air volume and quality
  • amount
  • contaminants
  • ventilation
  • Comfort
  • Stress
  • Heat stress
  • Cold stress

2
Air Volume and Quality
  • Volume of air required is proportional to local
    contaminants.
  • Usually not a problem in office buildings, but
  • Carbon dioxide may be limiting.
  • Body odors and cigarette smoke can be
    contaminants.
  • Danger of sick building syndrome
  • For forced-air heating and cooling, ventilation
    volume may be determined by room temperature.

3
Shop Environments
  • Local contaminants may pollute the air.
  • Solution strategies
  • Decrease the concentration of the contaminant.
  • Reduce worker exposure duration.
  • Consider ventilation.
  • Area ventilation
  • Use when contaminant sources are diffuse.
  • Keep the contaminant source downwind from the
    person.
  • Locate the source as close to the exhaust as
    possible.

4
Shop Environments, cont.
  • Local ventilation
  • Capture the contaminant directly.
  • Dump exhaust air outdoors or filter it.
  • Make filter systems fail-safe.
  • For explosive substances, TLV is limiting.
  • Consider reusing the air after filtration.
  • Clean rooms
  • Provide clean air.
  • Minimize contamination
  • personnel
  • materials

5
Comfort
  • Factors
  • Dry bulb temperature
  • Water vapor pressure
  • Air velocity
  • Radiant temperature
  • Metabolic rate
  • Clothing
  • Time of exposure

6
Comfort, cont.
  • For standard conditions
  • Use psychrometric chart to find comfort zone
    (fig. 25.1, pg. 490.)
  • Use percentage of people dissatisfied (PPD)
    calculation.
  • Adjustments for nonstandard conditions
  • Clothing
  • Activity
  • Air velocity
  • Mean radiant temperature
  • Time of exposure
  • Time of day and season of year
  • Gender and age of occupant

7
Individual Adjustment
  • Conventional approach is to set conditions to
    match comfort zone.
  • Desktop controls allow individuals to set their
    own conditions.
  • Occupancy sensors turn off equipment.
  • Energy savings may be substantial.

8
Heat Stress
  • Effects on performance and health
  • Performance deteriorates well before
    physiological limits are reached.
  • Illnesses include heat stroke, heat exhaustion,
    heat cramps, and heat disorders.
  • For health, use heart rate, blood pressure, or
    body temperature criteria.
  • Design using comfort as the criterion.
  • Setting environmental limits
  • Measure physiological responses during work
  • Predict the stress beforehand based on predicted
    environments and tasks
  • WBGT combines effects of the four environmental
    comfort factors.

9
Reduction of Heat Stress
  • Heat balance equation
  • S M (W) (R) (C) (E) (K)
  • Consider human body heat storage.
  • Reduce metabolic rate.
  • Consider work being done.
  • Reduce radiant load.
  • Maximize convective heat loss.
  • Increase evaporative heat transfer.
  • Consider conductive cooling.

10
Heat Transfer
  • Radiant
  • Driving force is difference between the 2
    temperatures, each to the 4th power.
  • Reduce radiant load by working in the shade.
  • Use clothing (hats and long-sleeved shirts).
  • Use a heat shield with ovens, welding, and molten
    glass.
  • Convective
  • Driving force is the difference between the
    temperatures.
  • Keep temperature of the environment below 35ºC
    (95ºF.)
  • Increase air velocity on the skin.
  • Permit air circulation around clothing.
  • Humid moving air can cool a worker by convection.

11
Heat Transfer, cont.
  • Evaporative
  • Sweating capacity increases with acclimatization.
  • Prevent dehydration by replacing water.
  • Evaporation can be limited by humidity.
  • Reduce effect of humidity by increasing air
    velocity or decreasing water vapor pressure.
  • Non-permeable clothing prevents sweat from
    evaporating.

12
Cold Stress
  • Cold causes discomfort, reduced mental
    performance and dexterity, pain, loss of
    extremities, and death.
  • Hand skin temperature critically affects
    dexterity and tactile sensitivity.
  • Vigilance decreases when the core temperature
    drops.
  • Environmental Limits
  • Wind chill index combines all factors for cold.
  • Wind chill is based on cooling water, not a
    clothed living human.
  • Use wind chill for livestock and for a crude
    index for precautions.

13
Cold Stress, cont.
  • Protection
  • Layer clothing.
  • Shoes should accommodate two pairs of socks.
  • Keep clothing dry.
  • Protect the head.
  • Warm the hands by wearing a jacket.
  • For exercise, use breathable fabrics.
  • Reduce air velocity.
  • Other Factors in Cold Stress
  • Cover vents or use diffusers or deflectors.
  • Keep floor temperature at 23ºC (73.5ºF) in
    offices.
  • Avoid contact with cold metal.
  • Drink fluids to prevent dehydration.
  • Avoid caffeine (a vasodilator.)
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