Hukseflux Thermal Sensors, market leader in heat flux measurement, has released the TCOMSYS01 system. It measures human thermal comfort according to the new Hot Cube method. Its application in automotive testing seems logic - Hukseflux was recently voted Automotive Supplier of the Year - but there is more.
Already in 1929 the Eupatheoscope (from Greek �wellbeing�emotion�examination�) was designed by A.F. Dufton to quantify the condition in a room from the point of view of comfort. It consists of a blackened cylinder which is controlled to maintain a temperature of 23 �C. The power used is interpreted in terms of equivalent temperatures. In the 1990�s, the company Bruel & Kjear carried a thermal comfort meter (model 1212), based on the same principle, and in addition processing Fangers equation. Both models involved only an integrated power measurement. The new Hot Cube method improves on this by incorporating omnidirectional heat flux measurements.
TCOMSYS01 is small enough to work in confined environments such as the passenger compartment of a car. Besides applications in the automotive industry, there are more usage examples of the Hot Cube system:
� surveys of human thermal comfort
� studies of the effect of radiating sources
� workplace investigations
� educational purposes, illustrating heat transfer
� bio-meteorology
� microclimate studies
� wind-chill analysis
� analysis of fabric insulation
About Hukseflux
Hukseflux offers measurement solutions for the most challenging applications. Its main area of expertise is measurement of heat transfer and thermal quantities such as solar radiation, heat flux and thermal conductivity. The company, based in Delft, the Netherlands, designs and supplies sensors as well as test & measuring systems, and offers related services such as engineering and consultancy. The complete product range of Hukseflux sensors and systems is offered worldwide.
Hukseflux offers a full range of sensors, systems and services to the automotive industry and was voted "Automotive Supplier of the Year" at the recent Automotive Thermal Management International Forum in the U.K. Besides heat flux measuring equipment, also Hukseflux� pyranometers, measuring solar radiation, are in use by the world�s most advanced car manufacturers.