Abstract

Preventing and alleviating heat stress remain an enormous challenge in dairy farming. Although enhanced air distribution techniques have been developed and deployed in many barns, ventilation alone is no longer sufficient even in regions with historically mild climates. There is an increasing need for cooling of the intake fresh air. Evaporative cooling is a cost-effective sustainable technique used in many applications, including livestock farming. This paper presents a graphical method for preliminary evaluation of evaporative cooling as a viable and effective solution. Thermodynamic principles are combined with models for heat transfer in dairy cattle to develop a set of criteria on the psychrometric chart. The proposed method is demonstrated for a naturally ventilated dairy barn located in the continental central European climate and in two locations with hot climates, a semi-arid/Mediterranean and a humid subtropical climate. • Thermoregulation models combined with thermodynamic principles. • Limits for effectiveness of evaporative cooling derived. • Developed criteria mapped onto psychrometric chart. • A graphical method to assess effectiveness of evaporative cooling proposed. • Proposed method demonstrated for sample barn in Europe.

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