a Human Ecology and Clothing Science, School of Fashion and Textiles, RMIT University , Victoria , Australia.
J Occup Environ Hyg. 2018 Nov;15(11):792-802. doi: 10.1080/15459624.2018.1506587.
Often male and female workers wear protective garments of identical construction and style, with females typically wearing small-sized men's garments. Consequently, the air spaces under garments worn by male and female wearers can substantially differ in size and distribution affecting the physiological comfort of firefighters' protective clothing. The present study was designed to investigate the effects of varying dimensions and distributions of air spaces in the next-to-skin microclimate under firefighters' protective jackets on attributes relevant to the thermal comfort of wearer, not only in relation to garment construction and fit, but also to human body geometry using 3D body scanning. Analysis of 20 scans demonstrated that jackets of the same size and construction create larger air spaces under them worn on a female as opposed to on a male body form. Both thermal and vapor resistance of clothing were affected significantly by the volume of trapped air.
通常情况下,男性和女性工人穿着结构和样式相同的防护服,女性通常穿小号的男式服装。因此,穿着者穿着的服装下的空气空间在大小和分布上会有很大的不同,这会影响消防员防护服的生理舒适度。本研究旨在调查消防员防护服贴身微气候下空气空间的不同尺寸和分布对与穿着者热舒适相关的属性的影响,不仅与服装结构和合身度有关,还与使用 3D 身体扫描的人体几何形状有关。对 20 个扫描的分析表明,相同尺寸和结构的夹克在女性身体上形成的空气空间比在男性身体上更大。服装的热阻和蒸汽阻力都受到被困空气量的显著影响。