Experimental and numerical study of back-cooling car-seat system using embedded heat pipes to improve passenger's comfort
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Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
This work develops a back-cooling system for a car seat using seat embedded heat pipes to improve passenger comfort. The heat pipe system utilizes the temperature difference between the passenger back and the car cabin air to remove heat from the human body and enhance the comfort state. The developed seat heat-pipe model was validated experimentally using a thermal manikin with controlled constant skin temperature mode in a climatic chamber. Good agreement was found between the measured and the numerically predicted values of base panel temperature. By integrating the validated heat pipe with a bio-heat model, the back segmental skin temperature as well as the overall thermal comfort was predicted and compared with the conventional seat case without the heat pipe system. The heat pipes were able to reduce the skin temperature by 1 °C and to increase the overall thermal comfort of the body by 30%. In addition, a parametric study was performed to determine the optimal number of heat pipes that ensure the thermal comfort of the passenger. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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Keywords
Bioheat modeling, Heat pipe cooling system, Passenger local thermal comfort, Seat back cooling, Automobile cooling systems, Automobile seats, Thermal comfort, Thermoelectric equipment, Bioheat models, Embedded heat pipes, Experimental and numerical studies, Heat pipe cooling, Overall thermal comforts, Panel temperature, Passenger comfort, Temperature differences, Heat pipes