Abstract
When work is performed by workers in protective clothing, sweat evaporation is limited and body temperature rises. In an attempt to quantify the limits such ensembles place on safe work, 6 acclimated men and women walked at 30% [vdot]O2max (150–200 W/m2) in 2 protocols involving environmental transients. In one, ambient water vapor pressure (Pw) was fixed at 10 torr, and after rectal temperature (Tre) plateaued, ambient dry-bulb temperature (Tdb) was raised 2°C every 10 min. In the second, Tdb was constant and Pw was increased 2 torr every 10 min. Critical temperature (Tcrit) and pressure (Pcrit) were defined as the Tdb or Pw at which thermal balance could no longer be maintained and Tre rose sharply. Each test was performed in various clothing ensembles ranging from light cotton work clothes to “impermeable” suits. Lines connecting mean Tcrit and mean Pcrit define a limit for safe prolonged exposure/exercise for approximately 50% of the population in each ensemble. Similar lines, drawn to represent values 2 standard deviations below the mean, should provide critical environmental limits for 95% of the population.
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