接触烧伤:灌注组织热损伤的分析评估

F. Colella, M. Yen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着我们越来越频繁地接触这些技术,消费电子产品和可穿戴设备造成的烧伤危险变得越来越普遍。消费电子产品的趋势表明,消费者花在散热设备上的时间越来越多。这种长时间、低温接触热质量相对较低的物体,在较恶劣的暴露条件下,有可能对皮肤组织造成热损伤。然而,许多法规指导更适合于评估因短时间接触不散发内热的热物体而持续的烧伤。一般来说,由于设备接触面积、皮肤几何形状、皮肤性质以及由于血液灌注和代谢热产生而导致的皮肤传热等复杂性,准确预测皮肤组织的时间-温度响应可能是一项复杂的任务。然而,对于大多数接触场景,皮肤的时间-温度响应可以表征为:(1)由物体热质量和初始温度控制的初始时间依赖阶段,然后是(2)由设备内部散热和皮肤的热生理特性控制的稳态阶段。在具有低热质量、低初始温度和长时间暴露的可穿戴设备或消费电子设备的背景下,在初始时间依赖阶段传递到皮肤的能量可以忽略不计,并且可以根据灌注组织的简化传热计算进行初步危害评估。本文提出了一些新的封闭形式的传热解决方案,以模拟一个灌注组织的行为,在接触的对象,散发热量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contact Burn Injuries: Analytical Assessments of Thermal Damage in a Perfused Tissue
Burn hazard from consumer electronics and wearables is growing more common as we maintain increasingly constant contact with these technologies. Trends in consumer electronics show that consumers are spending more time in contact with devices that dissipate heat. This long duration, low temperature contact with objects of relatively low thermal mass has the potential, under more severe exposure conditions, to cause thermal damage to the skin tissue. However, much of the regulatory guidance is more suited to evaluating burns sustained by short duration contact with hot objects that do not dissipate internal heat. In general, the accurate prediction of the time-temperature response of the skin tissue can be a complicated task due to complexities such as device contact area, skin geometry, skin properties, and heat transfer in the skin due to blood perfusion and metabolic heat generation. However, for most of the contact scenarios, the time-temperature response of the skin can be characterized by (1) initial time-dependent phases controlled by the object thermal mass and initial temperature followed by (2) a steady state phase that is controlled by the heat dissipation inside the device and the thermal and physiological properties of the skin. In the context of wearables or consumer electronics devices with low thermal mass, low initial temperatures and long duration exposures, the amount of energy transferred to the skin during the initial time-dependent phases can be neglected, and a preliminary hazard assessment can be conducted relying on simplified heat transfer calculations for a perfused tissue. This paper presents a number of novel closed form heat transfer solutions to simulate the behavior of a perfused tissue in contact with an object that dissipates heat.
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