RI 2355 Determination of the Relative Comfort of Mine Working Places by Means of the Katathermometer

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. Harrington G. E. McElroy
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
8
File Size:
2163 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1922

Abstract

In connection with the cooperative metal-mine dust and ventilation investigations of the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the U. S. Public Health Service , some underground data have been obtained with intent to ascertain the adaptability of the katathermometer for determining the comfort of working places in mines . This preliminary study indicates that the instrument will probably be useful for making routine determinations of comfort conditions in our mines , and that it may also prove an important accessory for investigative work on problems in ventilation and kindred subjects ; in both coal and metal mines , although the instrument should probably be altered somewhat for maximum utility under the varied conditions in the mines of the United States . The katathermometer is an instrument contrived by Dr. Leonard Hill , an eminent English physiologist , and its various features have been fully described by him in his book entitled " The Science of Ventilation and Open Air Treatment . " He made exhaustive experiments and concluded that the rate of cooling of the human body was the controlling factor in determining comfort or discomfort , and then set out to make an instrument that would measure this rate of cooling . The resulting instrument the katathermometer measures its own rate of cooling when its temperature approximates that of the human body and thus serves as an index of the rate of cooling of the body itself . - The instrument consists of an alcohol thermometer having a cylindrical bulb 1 inches long and 3/4 inches in diameter, and a stem about 8 inches long graduated from 95 to 100° F. This temperature range gives a mean temperature of 97.5° F. ( 36.5° C. ) , which is approximately that of the clothed body surface . The stem terminates in a small reservoir which serves the double purpose of acting as a safety overflow in case of overheating the bulb , and of insuring a regular rate of cooling by the time the meniscus has fallen to the 1000 point .
Citation

APA: D. Harrington G. E. McElroy  (1922)  RI 2355 Determination of the Relative Comfort of Mine Working Places by Means of the Katathermometer

MLA: D. Harrington G. E. McElroy RI 2355 Determination of the Relative Comfort of Mine Working Places by Means of the Katathermometer. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1922.

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