A Contrast Experiment on the Ventilation Direction towards Human Head in Personalized Environmental Control System (PECS)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Investigate the changes in skin temperature and thermal and airflow sensation before and after exposure to airflow directed at the head.
- Analyze the impact of airflow direction towards the head on human comfort through comparative experiments.
2. Research Methodology
2.1. Description of Experimental Platform
2.2. Description of Experimental Procedure
- Before each set of experiments began, the system was turned off. Participants were asked to sit and rest for at least 10 min to avoid interference from other thermal environments or walking, which could affect skin temperature. During this period, the probes of the skin thermometer were installed in the corresponding parts of participants, and they were introduced to the experimental procedures and questionnaires [45].
- Participants selected any experimental group freely and sat for 20 min. Free talk was permitted, but the discussion about the experiment was discouraged. All of them were free to perform computer work or read, with an estimated metabolic rate of 1.0–1.1 met. Their skin temperatures were monitored throughout the entire process [46].
- After 20 min, the system stopped running and participants had 5 min to complete the questionnaire. Then, participants should rest for 10 min to restore the initial state in the controlled temperature–humidity environment. They could enter another group freely to complete the next assessment.
- To avoid the influence of human fatigue on results, all participants only took part in a maximum of two groups per day (approximately 70 min). Each experiment involved a single person and each subject participated in the whole five groups of experiments. The order of the five groups was random.
2.3. Description of Experimental Measurement
2.4. Description of Questionnaire Survey
2.5. Description of Statistical Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Measurement of the Skin Temperatures
3.2. Voting of Thermal Sensation and Comfort
3.3. Voting of Airflow Sensation, Preference, and Symptom
3.4. The Correlation Analysis of Airflow Sensation with Thermal Sensation and Comfort
3.5. The Overall Willingness Assessment
4. Conclusions
- Skin temperature reduction: FB-PV, SB-PV, BB-PV, and TB-PV towards the head led to MST reductions of 0.4–0.6 °C, which showed that personalized ventilation can efficaciously mitigate the skin temperature.
- Improvement in thermal sensation: personalized ventilation towards the head could improve thermal sensation, especially for FB-PV, whose TSV was −0.77 (between “Slightly cool (−1)” and “ Neutral (0)”). TB-PV was −0.04 (very close to “Neutral (0)”), which had the optimal thermal sensation. The same trend was observed for the skin temperature and thermal sensation.
- Enhancement of comfort level: TB-PV demonstrated the highest comfort level with +1.05 (slightly higher than “Just comfortable (+1)”), while it was on the contrary for FB-PV of −1.11 (slightly lower than “Just uncomfortable (−1)”) due to discomfort in having the freedom to breathe under the continuous airflow.
- Overall willingness evaluation: TB-PV had the highest score of +1.21 (between “Willing (+1)” and “Very willing (+2)”). FB-PV and SB-PV scored +0.57 and +0.68 (between “Neutral (0)” and “Willing (+1)”), respectively. BB-PV was recorded as the lowest level of −0.18 (slightly lower than “0 (neutral)”).
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Air Temperature | Relative Humidity | Airflow Speed around Subjects | Room Air Speed | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Designed | 29.0 ± 0.5 °C | 60 ± 5% | 1.80 ± 0.15 m/s | <0.15 m/s |
Measured | 29.1 ± 0.2 °C | 58 ± 3% | 1.84 ± 0.11 m/s | 0.11 ± 0.03 m/s |
Variable | Sensor | Manufacturer and Country | Measuring Range | Accuracy |
---|---|---|---|---|
Air temperature | JT2011 | JT Technology Co., Ltd., Beijing, China. | −20~+70 °C | ±0.5 °C |
Relative humidity | 0~95% | ±5% | ||
Air speed | JT2023A | 0~5 m/s | ±(0.03 m/s + 2%) | |
Skin temperature | iButton DS1923 | BOB Technology Co., Ltd., Shanghai, China. | −20~+85 °C | ±0.5 °C |
Scale | Thermal Sensation Vote | Airflow Sensation Vote | Airflow Speed Preference | Thermal Comfort Vote | Overall Willingness Vote |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
+3 | Hot | Very strong | --- | Very comfortable | --- |
+2 | Warm | Strong | --- | Comfortable | Very willing |
+1 | Slightly warm | Slightly strong | Turn up | Just comfortable | Willing |
0 | Neutral | Neutral | No change | Neutral | Neutral |
−1 | Slightly cool | Slightly weak | Turn down | Just uncomfortable | Unwilling |
−2 | Cool | Weak | --- | Uncomfortable | Very unwilling |
−3 | Cold | Very weak | --- | Very uncomfortable | --- |
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Li, C.; Fu, W.; Meng, X. A Contrast Experiment on the Ventilation Direction towards Human Head in Personalized Environmental Control System (PECS). Sustainability 2024, 16, 5704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135704
Li C, Fu W, Meng X. A Contrast Experiment on the Ventilation Direction towards Human Head in Personalized Environmental Control System (PECS). Sustainability. 2024; 16(13):5704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135704
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Canyang, Wenkai Fu, and Xi Meng. 2024. "A Contrast Experiment on the Ventilation Direction towards Human Head in Personalized Environmental Control System (PECS)" Sustainability 16, no. 13: 5704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135704
APA StyleLi, C., Fu, W., & Meng, X. (2024). A Contrast Experiment on the Ventilation Direction towards Human Head in Personalized Environmental Control System (PECS). Sustainability, 16(13), 5704. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135704