Design and Evaluation of a Suspension Seat to Reduce Vibration Exposure of Subway Operators: A Case Study
Autor: | Christian Larue, Pierre Marcotte, Jérôme Boutin, Sylvie Beaugrand |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Health
Toxicology and Mutagenesis Acceleration Population Accelerometer Vibration Damper Occupational Exposure Humans Whole body vibration education Suspension (vehicle) Railroads Transmissibility (structural dynamics) Pain Measurement Mathematics education.field_of_study business.industry Protective Devices Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Structural engineering equipment and supplies Cushion Ergonomics business human activities |
Zdroj: | Industrial Health. 48:715-724 |
ISSN: | 1880-8026 0019-8366 |
DOI: | 10.2486/indhealth.mswbvi-17 |
Popis: | Subway operators have complained about discomfort caused by whole-body vibration. To address this problem, a suspension seat with extensive ergonomic features has been adapted to the confined space of the subway operator cab. The suspension was modified from an existing suspension in order to reduce the dominant frequency of the subway vertical vibration (2.4 Hz). The suspension seat has been extensively tested on a vertical hydraulic shaker. These tests have shown that the SEAT value was lower for a higher vibration level, for higher subject weight, and for the suspension adjusted at median height. The seat also produces a lower SEAT value when there was a predominance of the 6 Hz vibration component. The horizontal seat adjustments had no influence on the suspension SEAT value. Removing the suspension damper also decreases the SEAT value for all the tested configurations. The final version of the suspension seat prototype was validated during normal subway operation with 19 different operators having weight in the 5th, 50th and 95th percentile of the operator population. Accelerations were measured with triaxial accelerometers at the seat cushion, above the suspension and on the floor. In addition to the vibration measurements, each operator was asked about his perceived discomfort from vibration exposure. Globally, the suspension seat attenuated the vertical vibration (SEAT values from 0.86 to 0.99), but discomfort due to amplification of the 2.4 Hz component occurred when the suspension height was adjusted at the minimum, even when the global weighted acceleration was lower (SEAT value < 1). These results suggest that in order to reduce the discomfort caused by whole-body vibration, the transmissibility of the seat should also be considered, in particular when there is a dominant frequency in the vibration spectra. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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