Effects of environmental temperature and humidity on evaporative heat loss through firefighter suit materials made with semi-permeable and microporous moisture barriers

Author:

Gao Huipu1ORCID,Deaton Anthoney Shawn1,Fang Xiaomeng1,Watson Kyle1,DenHartog Emiel A1ORCID,Barker Roger1

Affiliation:

1. Textile Protection and Comfort Center, North Carolina State University, USA

Abstract

The goal of this research was to understand how firefighter protective suits perform in different operational environments. This study used a sweating guarded hotplate to examine the effect of environmental temperature (20–45°C) and relative humidity (25–85% RH) on evaporative heat loss through firefighter turnout materials. Four firefighter turnout composites containing three different bi-component (semi-permeable) and one microporous moisture barriers were selected. The results showed that the evaporative resistance of microporous moisture barrier systems was independent of environmental testing conditions. However, absorbed moisture strongly affected evaporative heat loss through semi-permeable moisture barriers coated with a layer of nonporous hydrophilic polymer. Moisture absorption in mild environment (20–25°C) tests, or when testing at high humidity (>85% RH), significantly increased water vapor transmission in semi-permeable turnout systems. It was also found that environmental conditions used in the total heat loss (THL) test (25°C and 65% RH) produced moisture condensation in bi-component barrier systems, making them appear more breathable than could be expected when worn in hotter environments. Regression models successfully qualified the relationships between moisture uptake levels in semi-permeable barrier systems and evaporative resistance and THL. These findings reveal the limitations in relying on THL, the heat strain index currently called for by the NFPA 1971 Standard for Structural Firefighter personal protective equipment, and supports the need to measure turnout evaporative resistance at 35°C (Ret), in addition to THL at 25°C.

Funder

Federal Emergency Management Agency

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Polymers and Plastics,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous)

Reference36 articles.

1. Smith DL, Horn GP, Goldstein E, et al. Firefighter fatalities and injuries: the role of heat stress and PPE. Report, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA, 2008.

2. Physiological strain and countermeasures with firefighting

3. NFPA 1971:2018. Standard on protective ensembles for structural fire fighting and proximity fire fighting.

4. ASTM F1868:2017. Standard test method for thermal and evaporative resistance of clothing materials using a sweating hot plate.

5. Textiles for Firefighting Protective Clothing

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