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Environmental Factors

Environmental Factors. Effects of Temperature Hardianto Iridiastadi, Ph.D. Introduction. Cases Manufacturing plant Mining Military Emergency responders. Introduction. Comfortable environment Temperature Humidity Air distribution Also affected by Seasons of year

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Environmental Factors

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  1. Environmental Factors Effects of Temperature Hardianto Iridiastadi, Ph.D.

  2. Introduction • Cases • Manufacturing plant • Mining • Military • Emergency responders

  3. Introduction • Comfortable environment • Temperature • Humidity • Air distribution • Also affected by • Seasons of year • Dry and wet bulb temperature • Cultural practices and habits

  4. Introduction • Comfortable environment • Chart for certain populations • E.g., ASHRAE Handbook • Increased heat • Environment • Physical activities

  5. Heat Transfer • How it occurs • Object with higher temperature to that with lower temperature • Mechanisms • Conduction (typically not a significant factor) • Convection • Radiation

  6. Heat Exchange • Sources of heat • Metabolic (internally generated) • Environmental (externally imposed) • Net heat exchange H = M + R + C – E H = heat storage M = metabolic heat gain R = radiant/infrared heat C = convection E = evaporative

  7. Problems with Heat • Heat stress • Common across industries • Total heat imposed on the body • Heat strain • Physiological responses to the body • Reflects the degree of heat stress • Varies from discomfort to disorders

  8. Problems with Heat • Influencing factors • Heat stress intensity • Age • Physical fitness • Degree of aclimatization • Dehydration level • Alcohol intake • Obesity

  9. Problems with Heat • Heat disorders • Can be distinguished clinically • Rangin from heat syncope (fainting) to complex heatstroke

  10. Problems with Heat • Effects on the workers • Faint while standing erect • Painful muscle spasms (during or after work) • Impaired performance • Mental • Vigilance • Sensorimotor • Reduced capacity • Poor behavior

  11. Problems with Heat • Central nervous system • Hypothalamus of the brain acts as a control/thermostat • Initiates to cool/heat the body, if temperature difference exists

  12. Problems with Heat • Heat illnesses • Heat stroke • Thermoregulation fails • Core temperature exceeds 41oC • Fatal if untreated • One may collapse and disoriented • Skin is hot, red, and dry • Active cooling is needed

  13. Introduction • Heat illnesses • Heat exhaustion • Combined strain (thermoregulatory and cardiovascular) • One feels weak and un-coordinated • Shallow breath • Rapid, weak pulse • Treatment via removing from the heat, removal of clothing, and fanning

  14. Introduction • Heat illnesses • Heat syncope • Fainting due to inadequate venous return • Common for unacclimatized person • Need to lie down • Heat hyperventilation • Excessive loss of carbon dioxide • Can occur while wearing protective clothing

  15. Introduction • Heat illnesses • Prickly heat • Fine, superficial skin rash • Due to excessive sweating • Often occurs on areas of skin covered by clothing or protective equipment

  16. Thermoregulation • Human thermoregulation • Ability to tolerate heat • Balance between metabolic heat produced and heat loss • Objective to maintain core temp. at 36 – 37oC • Stability needed for most biochemical reactions

  17. Thermoregulation • Human thermoregulation • Temperature outside the range • >39.5 – disabling • >42 – fatal • 35.5 – lower acceptable limit • <33 – onset of cardiac disturbances • < 25 - fatal

  18. Human Thermoregulation • Human thermoregulation • Heat gained • Metabolic energy production • Radiation • Convection • Conduction (minimal) • Heat loss • Evaporation, Radiation, Convection • Balance between the two

  19. Human Thermoregulation • Human thermoregulation • Evaporation • Sweat production and evaporation as means to loose heat to the environment • The importance of maintaining the balance via a variety of methods

  20. Sweating • What it is… • Sweat glands stimulated by the nerves • A dilute solution of various electrolytes (sodium, potassium, and chloride); mainly salt (sodium chloride) • Potential loss of 500 g/sq.m • Loss of 100g/hour; can be up to 1 – 2 kg/h • Loss of 1 l/hr is frequently found

  21. Sweating • What it is • Sweat cools the body (only if evaporates) • Less efficient in humid environment • Result in dehydration and loosing salt • Affected by air humidity and movement

  22. Sweating • Sweat and dehydration • 1 liter fluid loss ~ 1 kg drop in body weight • Workers can be weighed before and after • Dehydration increases risk of heat exhaustion

  23. Sweating • Risk of dehydration • 1% of body weight (max) – use this as maximum of work period • 2% loss – performance decrement and unpleasent • 4% loss – maximum allowed • 4 liter sweat (max) / 8 hr (WHO) • 6% loss – threat to health

  24. Measurement • Dry bulb temperature • Common thermometers • Wet bulb temperature • Thermometer with wet cloth “sock” • Globe temperature • Measure the effects of radiant heat

  25. Measurement • Climatic factors • Humidity? • Relative humidity? • Water vapor pressure? • Dew point?

  26. Measurement • Five key variables • Relative humidity (rh) • Dew point temperature (tdp) • Dry bulb temperature (DBT) • Wet bulb temperature (WBT) • Vapor pressure (pa) • Psychrometric chart

  27. Measurement • Relative humidity • % water vapor pressure (against saturated pressure) • Air movement • Affects evaporation

  28. Measurement • Heat stress indices • Dry bulb temperature • Wet bulb temperature • Effective temperature • WBGT index

  29. Measurement • WBGT index • Web bulb globe temperature (WBGT) • WBGT (out) = 0.7WB + 0.2GT + 0.1DB • WBGT (in) = 0.7WB + 0.3 GT

  30. Measurement • Heat stress monitor • Place where workers do the job; but with no workers • Measure once/hr • Sampling, if workers move around • Also measure outdoor temp (wet and dry)

  31. Factors to Consider • Worker • Tolerance • Aerobic capacity • Age, gender, body fat • Acclimatization • Max 1 l/h for un-acclimatized person • Less blood flow need, more blood volume, less salt concentration, and max 2 l/h for acclimatized person

  32. Factors to Consider • Environment • Humidity (RH), heat, shade • Wind speed, etc. • Task requirements • Work rate, rest schedule, protective clothing

  33. Recommendation • OSHA monitoring techniques • Pulse > 110 bpm? Reduce work cycle to 1/3 • Oral temperature > 37.6oC? Shorten work period by 1/3 • Body weight loss > 1.5% during shift? Increase fluid intake • Limit of 38oC (deep body temp) for prolonged work (WHO)

  34. Recommendation • General control methods • Acclimatization • Fluid replacement • Engineering controls • Administrative controls and work practices • Worker monitoring program

  35. Recommendation • Acclimatization • Lower heart rate • Lower body temperature • Higher sweat rate • More dilute (less salt) sweat • 2 hrs/day (for a week or two); incrase gradually • Acclimatization lost in days (traces in 2 – 3 months)

  36. Recommendation • Preventing dehydration • Plenty of drink before and during work (10 – 15.6oC) • One cup of fluid every 20 min (OSHA) • Avoid caffeine (& drugs) while working • Provide fluid-rich foods (soup, yoghurt, etc.) • Provide only water (no energy drink) • Juice and milk absorbed slower • Salt provision in a separate diet (enough)

  37. Recommendation • Engineering controls • General ventilations • Air conditioning • Air cooling • Convection (fans) • Shielding • Heat conduction

  38. Heat Stress Management • Basic steps • Use dehumidifiers, increase air movement • Remove heavy clothing • Reduce work rate • Frequent rest pauses • Job rotation • Outdoor work during cooler times • 2-week of acclimatization • Rest, water, shade, cool spots

  39. Heat Stress Management • OSHA Guidelines – Permissible Heat Exp. TLV

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