1. A calorimeter for the continuous measurement of heat production and heat loss in the human subject, for at least 24 h, is described. The calorimeter operated on the heat-sink principle for direct calorimetry and an open-circuit system for indirect calorimetry.2. Sensible heat loss was measured using a water-cooled heat exchanger, and the temperature of water entering the heat exchanger was controlled to maintain a mean temperature gradient of zero across the chamber walls.3. Evaporative heat loss was determined from ingoing and outgoing wet-and-dry bulb temperatures and air flow-rates.4. Problems associated with the calculation of evaporative heat loss and the estimation of the volume of incoming air in open-circuit systems are considered.5. The calibration, limits of accuracy, sources of error and experiments with subjects are discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Dauncey, M. J., Murgatroyd, P. R., & Cole, T. J. (1978). A human calorimeter for the direct and indirect measurement of 24 h energy expenditure. British Journal of Nutrition, 39(3), 557–566. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19780071
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