Advanced Search

Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene

Volume 5, Issue 10, 2008

Modeling the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature Using Standard Meteorological Measurements

Modeling the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature Using Standard Meteorological Measurements

DOI:
10.1080/15459620802310770
James C. Liljegrena, Richard A. Carharta, Philip Lawdaya, Stephen Tschoppa & Robert Sharpa

pages 645-655

Available online: 04 Aug 2008

Abstract

The U.S. Army has a need for continuous, accurate estimates of the wet bulb globe temperature to protect soldiers and civilian workers from heat-related injuries, including those involved in the storage and destruction of aging chemical munitions at depots across the United States. At these depots, workers must don protective clothing that increases their risk of heat-related injury. Because of the difficulty in making continuous, accurate measurements of wet bulb globe temperature outdoors, the authors have developed a model of the wet bulb globe temperature that relies only on standard meteorological data available at each storage depot for input. The model is composed of separate submodels of the natural wet bulb and globe temperatures that are based on fundamental principles of heat and mass transfer, has no site-dependent parameters, and achieves an accuracy of better than 1°C based on comparisons with wet bulb globe temperature measurements at all depots.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 04 Aug 2008

Author affiliations

  • a Argonne National Laboratory, Decision and Information Sciences Division, Lemont, Illinois

Journal news

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group