Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

Heat stress on workers wearing PPE (Personal protective equipment) in hot outdoor environments is of rising concern, especially in cases when rest breaks and clothing changes are impractical. Mist fan evaporative cooling could provide low-energy continuous cooling, even during work activity. The coo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Craig Farnham, Jihui Yuan, Kazuo Emura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
Series:Clean Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8797/7/1/9
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849343065479708672
author Craig Farnham
Jihui Yuan
Kazuo Emura
author_facet Craig Farnham
Jihui Yuan
Kazuo Emura
author_sort Craig Farnham
collection DOAJ
description Heat stress on workers wearing PPE (Personal protective equipment) in hot outdoor environments is of rising concern, especially in cases when rest breaks and clothing changes are impractical. Mist fan evaporative cooling could provide low-energy continuous cooling, even during work activity. The cooling effect of a misting fan was compared to that of a fan alone, as well as natural convection. A thermal mannequin with heat flux sensors at eight body locations was exposed to an outdoor misting fan while being clothed in typical work clothes and PPE. Work clothes were dry or saturated with water to simulate sweat. The distance from the misting fan ranged from 4 m (wetting common) to 7 m (wetting unlikely). On average, the misting fan had a cooling effect of 0.31 met (18.3 W/m<sup>2</sup>) higher than natural convection when PPE is worn with wet work clothes, and 0.35 met (20.3 W/m<sup>2</sup>) higher than when PPE is worn with dry work clothes. This equates to reducing the thermal metabolic load from light industrial work to walking about in office work, or from standing to reclining. Under the ISO 7243 international standard for workers in hot environments, this would increase the acceptable WBGT (wet bulb globe temperature) by over 0.6 °C.
format Article
id doaj-art-285d06464afd4276aee1048103a0926f
institution Kabale University
issn 2571-8797
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Clean Technologies
spelling doaj-art-285d06464afd4276aee1048103a0926f2025-08-20T03:43:11ZengMDPI AGClean Technologies2571-87972025-01-0171910.3390/cleantechnol7010009Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)Craig Farnham0Jihui Yuan1Kazuo Emura2School of Human Life and Ecology, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 558-8585, JapanSchool of Human Life and Ecology, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 558-8585, JapanSchool of Human Life and Ecology, Osaka Metropolitan University, Osaka 558-8585, JapanHeat stress on workers wearing PPE (Personal protective equipment) in hot outdoor environments is of rising concern, especially in cases when rest breaks and clothing changes are impractical. Mist fan evaporative cooling could provide low-energy continuous cooling, even during work activity. The cooling effect of a misting fan was compared to that of a fan alone, as well as natural convection. A thermal mannequin with heat flux sensors at eight body locations was exposed to an outdoor misting fan while being clothed in typical work clothes and PPE. Work clothes were dry or saturated with water to simulate sweat. The distance from the misting fan ranged from 4 m (wetting common) to 7 m (wetting unlikely). On average, the misting fan had a cooling effect of 0.31 met (18.3 W/m<sup>2</sup>) higher than natural convection when PPE is worn with wet work clothes, and 0.35 met (20.3 W/m<sup>2</sup>) higher than when PPE is worn with dry work clothes. This equates to reducing the thermal metabolic load from light industrial work to walking about in office work, or from standing to reclining. Under the ISO 7243 international standard for workers in hot environments, this would increase the acceptable WBGT (wet bulb globe temperature) by over 0.6 °C.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8797/7/1/9heat stressevaporation coolingmistPPEworker healthheat stroke
spellingShingle Craig Farnham
Jihui Yuan
Kazuo Emura
Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Clean Technologies
heat stress
evaporation cooling
mist
PPE
worker health
heat stroke
title Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
title_full Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
title_short Evaluation of the Cooling Effect of an Outdoor Misting Fan for Workers in Hot Environments Wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
title_sort evaluation of the cooling effect of an outdoor misting fan for workers in hot environments wearing personal protective equipment ppe
topic heat stress
evaporation cooling
mist
PPE
worker health
heat stroke
url https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8797/7/1/9
work_keys_str_mv AT craigfarnham evaluationofthecoolingeffectofanoutdoormistingfanforworkersinhotenvironmentswearingpersonalprotectiveequipmentppe
AT jihuiyuan evaluationofthecoolingeffectofanoutdoormistingfanforworkersinhotenvironmentswearingpersonalprotectiveequipmentppe
AT kazuoemura evaluationofthecoolingeffectofanoutdoormistingfanforworkersinhotenvironmentswearingpersonalprotectiveequipmentppe