A micro-to-macroscale and multi-method investigation of human sweating dynamics
Cibin T. Jose, Ankit Joshi, Shri H. Viswanathan, Sincere K. Nash, Kambiz Sadeghi, Stavros A. Kavouras, Konrad Rykaczewski

TL;DR
This study combines microscale imaging and macroscale physiological measurements to explore human sweating dynamics, revealing new insights into biophysical processes and the influence of skin hydration, salt deposits, and hair.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-method approach integrating microscale imaging with physiological measurements to study human sweating at micro-to-macroscale levels, which was previously unexplored.
Findings
Microscale imaging correlates with physiological measurements of sweating.
Sweating dynamics involve porewise, transition, and filmwise modes.
Skin hydration, salt deposits, and hair influence sweating behavior.
Abstract
Sweat secretion and evaporation from the skin dictate the human ability to thermoregulate and thermal comfort in hot environments and impact skin interactions with cosmetics, textiles, and wearable electronics or sensors. However, sweating has mostly been investigated using macroscopic physiological methods, leaving micro-to-macroscale sweating dynamics unexplored. We explore these processes by employing a coupled microscale imaging and transport measurement approach used in engineering studies of phase change processes. Specifically, we employed a comprehensive set of macroscale physiological measurements (ventilated capsule sweat rate, galvanic skin conductance, and dielectric epidermis hydration) complemented by three microscale imaging techniques (visible light, midwave infrared, and optical coherence tomography imaging). Inspired by industrial jet cooling devices, we also explore…
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