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Annals of Occupational Hygiene Advance Access published online on June 15, 2006

Annals of Occupational Hygiene, doi:10.1093/annhyg/mel030
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Occupational Hygiene Society
Received December 22, 2005
Accepted May 5, 2006

Article

Temperature Limit Values For Touching Cold Surfaces with the Fingertip

Q. Geng 1 * {dagger}, I. Holmér 2 {dagger}, Den E. A. Hartog 3, G. Havenith 4, O. Jay 4, J. Malchaire 5, A. Piette 5, H. Rintamäki 6, and S. Rissanen 6

1 Swedish Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Engineering, Box 7033, SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden
2 Department of Design Sciences, Lund Technical University, Lund, Sweden
3 TNO Defence, Security and Safety, Business Unit Human Factors, Soesterberg, The Netherlands
4 Department of Human Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK
5 Université catholique de Louvain, Clos Chapelle-aux-Champs, Brussels, Belgium
6 Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Oulu, Finland

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Q. Geng, E-mail: qiuqing.geng{at}jti.slu.se


   Abstract

Objectives: At the request of the European Commission and in the framework of the European Machinery Directive, research was performed in five different laboratories to develop specifications for surface temperature limit values for the short-term accidental touching of the fingertip with cold surfaces.

Methods: Data were collected in four laboratories with a total of 20 males and 20 females performing a grand total of 1655 exposures. Each touched polished blocks of aluminium, stainless steel, nylon-6 and wood using the distal phalanx of the index finger with a contact force of 1.0, 2.9 and 9.8 N, at surface temperatures from +2 to -40°C for a maximum duration of 120 s. Conditions were selected in order to elicit varying rates of skin cooling upon contact. Contact temperature (TC) of the fingertip was measured over time using a T-type thermocouple.

Results: A database obtained from the experiments was collated and analysed to characterize fingertip contact cooling across a range of materials and surface temperatures. The database was subsequently used to develop a predictive model to describe the contact duration required for skin contact temperature to reach the physiological criteria of onset of pain (15°C), onset of numbness (7°C) and onset of frostbite risk (0°C).

Conclusions: The data reflect the strong link between the risk of skin damage and the thermal properties of the material touched. For aluminium and steel, skin temperatures of 0°C occurs within 2-6 s at surface temperatures of -15°C. For non-metallic surfaces, onset of numbness occurs within 15-65 s of contact at -35°C and onset of cold pain occurs within 5 s of contact at -20°C. The predictive model subsequently developed was a non-linear exponential expression also reflecting the effects of material thermal properties and initial temperature. This model provides information for the protection of workers against the risk of cold injury by establishing the temperature limits of cold touchable surfaces for a broad range of materials, and it is now proposed as guidance values in a new international standard.


{dagger}Project work carried out at National Institute for Working Life, Solna, Sweden
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