CONCAVE Research Center, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
CONCAVE Research Center, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
Appl Ergon. 2018 Jan;66:121-138. doi: 10.1016/j.apergo.2017.08.005. Epub 2017 Aug 29.
The vibration isolation performances of vibration reducing (VR) gloves are invariably assessed in terms of power tools' handle vibration transmission to the palm of the hand using the method described in ISO 10819 (2013), while the nature of vibration transmitted to the fingers is ignored. Moreover, the VR gloves with relatively low stiffness viscoelastic materials affect the grip strength in an adverse manner. This study is aimed at performance assessments of 12 different VR gloves on the basis of handle vibration transmission to the palm and the fingers of the gloved hand, together with reduction in the grip strength. The gloves included 3 different air bladder, 3 gel, 3 hybrid, and 2 gel-foam gloves in addition to a leather glove. Two Velcro finger adapters, each instrumented with a three-axis accelerometer, were used to measure vibration responses of the index and middle fingers near the mid-phalanges. Vibration transmitted to the palm was measured using the standardized palm adapter. The vibration transmissibility responses of the VR gloves were measured in the laboratory using the instrumented cylindrical handle, also described in the standard, mounted on a vibration exciter. A total of 12 healthy male subjects participated in the study. The instrumented handle was also used to measure grip strength of the subjects with and without the VR gloves. The results of the study showed that the VR gloves, with only a few exceptions, attenuate handle vibration transmitted to the fingers only in the 10-200 Hz and amplify middle finger vibration at frequencies exceeding 200 Hz. Many of the gloves, however, provided considerable reduction in vibration transmitted to the palm, especially at higher frequencies. These suggest that the characteristics of vibration transmitted to fingers differ considerably from those at the palm. Four of the test gloves satisfied the screening criteria of the ISO 10819 (2013) based on the palm vibration alone, even though these caused amplification of handle vibration at the fingers. The fingers' vibration transmission performance of gloves were further evaluated using a proposed finger frequency-weighting W apart from the standardized W-weighting. It is shown that the W weighting generally overestimates the VR glove effectiveness in limiting the fingers vibration in the high (H: 200-1250 Hz) frequency range. Both the weightings, however, revealed comparable performance of gloves in the mid (M: 25-200 Hz) frequency range. The VR gloves, with the exception of the leather glove, showed considerable reductions in the grip strength (27-41%), while the grip strength reduction was not correlated with the glove material thickness. It is suggested that effectiveness of VR gloves should be assessed considering the vibration transmission to both the palm and fingers of the hand together with the hand grip strength reduction.
振动降低(VR)手套的隔振性能通常根据 ISO 10819(2013)中描述的方法,通过评估工具手柄振动传递到手掌来进行评估,而忽略了传递到手指的振动性质。此外,具有相对较低刚度的粘弹性材料的 VR 手套会以不利的方式影响握持力。本研究旨在根据手柄振动传递到戴手套的手掌和手指以及握持力降低的情况,对 12 种不同的 VR 手套进行性能评估。手套包括 3 种不同的气囊、3 种凝胶、3 种混合和 2 种凝胶泡沫手套以及 1 种皮手套。使用两个 Velcro 手指适配器,每个适配器都装有一个三轴加速度计,测量中指和食指近中节的振动响应。使用标准手掌适配器测量手掌的振动传递。使用标准中描述的安装在振动激振器上的带仪器化圆柱形手柄,在实验室中测量 VR 手套的振动传递率响应。共有 12 名健康男性受试者参与了这项研究。使用带仪器化手柄还测量了受试者戴和不戴 VR 手套时的握力。研究结果表明,除了少数例外,VR 手套仅在 10-200 Hz 频率范围内减弱传递到手指的手柄振动,并在超过 200 Hz 的频率下放大中指振动。然而,许多手套在较高频率下提供了相当大的手掌振动衰减。这表明传递到手指的振动特性与手掌有很大的不同。仅根据手掌振动,有 4 个测试手套符合 ISO 10819(2013)的筛选标准,尽管这些手套会导致手指处手柄振动放大。使用除标准 W 加权外还提出的手指频率加权 W 进一步评估手套的手指振动传递性能。结果表明,W 加权通常会高估 VR 手套在限制高频(H:200-1250 Hz)范围内手指振动的有效性。然而,两种加权都揭示了手套在中频(M:25-200 Hz)范围内的可比性能。除皮手套外,所有 VR 手套的握力(27-41%)都有明显降低,而手套材料厚度与握力降低无关。建议应考虑到 VR 手套对手掌和手指的振动传递以及对手握力的降低,一起评估 VR 手套的有效性。