Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions

The presented study reveals a multi-point experimental measurement of the airflow speed, generated in the exhalation phase from the human respiratory cycle, based on data from 10 real human subjects. The results obtained demonstrate the exceptional irregularity and the transient character of the hum...

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Main Author: Ivanov Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_02074.pdf
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spelling doaj-05bcd7b39a2142b9845200a417e6da722021-02-02T04:47:39ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422019-01-011110207410.1051/e3sconf/201911102074e3sconf_clima2019_02074Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditionsIvanov Martin0Technical University – Sofia, FPEPM, Department:” Hydroaerodynamics and Hydraulic Machines”The presented study reveals a multi-point experimental measurement of the airflow speed, generated in the exhalation phase from the human respiratory cycle, based on data from 10 real human subjects. The results obtained demonstrate the exceptional irregularity and the transient character of the human respiratory cycle, in terms of measured speed at different points of man-generated exhalation air flow. The presented exponential trend lines show as expected, that there is a reduction in the exhalation speed, with the increase of the distance from the nose. The summary analysis shows that at 10 cm distance from the nose the maximum as well as the average measured speeds are higher than the one, measured at 5 cm distance. This suggests that due to the physiology of the human nose, 5 cm distance is not enough to characterize the fully developed exhalation jet flow. It is suggested that at this distance the exhalation jets are still two, issuing from each nostril, with different flowrate ratio. The obtained flow characteristics can be used to compare, validate and verify data from conducted numerical studies of the breathing process, via virtual models or real breathing thermal mannikins.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_02074.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ivanov Martin
spellingShingle Ivanov Martin
Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Ivanov Martin
author_sort Ivanov Martin
title Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
title_short Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
title_full Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
title_fullStr Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
title_full_unstemmed Exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
title_sort exhaled air speed measurements of respiratory air flow, generated by ten different human subjects, under uncontrolled conditions
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The presented study reveals a multi-point experimental measurement of the airflow speed, generated in the exhalation phase from the human respiratory cycle, based on data from 10 real human subjects. The results obtained demonstrate the exceptional irregularity and the transient character of the human respiratory cycle, in terms of measured speed at different points of man-generated exhalation air flow. The presented exponential trend lines show as expected, that there is a reduction in the exhalation speed, with the increase of the distance from the nose. The summary analysis shows that at 10 cm distance from the nose the maximum as well as the average measured speeds are higher than the one, measured at 5 cm distance. This suggests that due to the physiology of the human nose, 5 cm distance is not enough to characterize the fully developed exhalation jet flow. It is suggested that at this distance the exhalation jets are still two, issuing from each nostril, with different flowrate ratio. The obtained flow characteristics can be used to compare, validate and verify data from conducted numerical studies of the breathing process, via virtual models or real breathing thermal mannikins.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2019/37/e3sconf_clima2019_02074.pdf
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