A Finite Element Approach to Evaluate Thermoregulation in the Human Body due to the Effects of Sweat Evaporation during Cooking, Cleaning, and Walking

Sweat evaporation is the principal process of dissipating heat energy in a hot environment and during activities. Sweat loss is significantly affected by the level of energy expenditure, hormones, and the number of sweat glands.)e thickness of the skin layer plays a vital role to maintain body temperature. )e rate of sweat evaporation varies with ambient temperature and activity level. On increasing both metabolism and ambient temperature, sweat rate loss also increases and controls the body in the thermoregulatory system. )e evaporative sweat release rate has a linear behavior. )e appropriate physical and physiological parameters that affect thermoregulation have been incorporated into the model. )e study presents the temperature distribution in three layers: epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue (SST) of the human dermal parts during cooking, cleaning, and walking. )e solution is obtained by using the finite element method.)e results demonstrate that the body mechanism keeps the body in thermoregulation by increasing the sweat evaporation rate exhibited by increasing the ambient temperature and metabolism during strenuous activities.


Background
Heat dissipation during physical activities is a principal part of thermoregulation in the human body. Generally, the body loses heat by the processes of conduction, convection, radiation, and evaporation through the skin. When the atmospheric temperature equals or exceeds the skin temperature or the body produces more metabolic heat energy, heat loss occurs by radiation, and convection processes are inadequate to control the body temperature. So the hypothalamus, the temperature control room of the brain, becomes active and conveys the signal to different organs such as muscles, glands, and nerves. ese organs respond and most of the excess heat loss by the evaporation process, which keeps the body in homeostasis [1]. e water loss from the body by releasing sweat is the amount of evaporating sweat determined by air velocity and the water vapor pressure gradient between skin and atmospheric temperature. e sweat release rate and its regulation depend on the body core, skin temperature, wetted skin area, heat storage, and ambient variables. Clothing, physical activity level, and the number of active eccrine and apocrine glands also play a vital role in sweating. A high sweat rate occurs on the forehead, neck, interior, and posterior parts of the trunk and dorsal surface of the hand and forearm. Low rates occur in the medial femoral region, lateral trunk area, palms, and soles in the human body [2].
Sweating is present and effective in children also, but the high capacity of evaporating heat occurs in an adult due to having more sweat glands [2]. ere is no change in the exhale sweat rate in the age group between 18 and 50 years. After 50 years of age, there is a decrement in the sweating response due to the decrease in basal metabolic rate (BMR) [3].
At the rest position, the body produces a negligible sweating amount at the normal environment temperature. It loses about 25% of heat energy in the form of sweat. Each liter of evaporating sweat removes about 580 kcal of heat energy from the body [4]. A healthy body produces approximately 1.94 ml of sweating in a hot moist environment [3]. e sweat release rate from the body is proportional to ambient temperature and metabolic rate. Generally, in a rest lightly clothes person, the sweat starts at 29°C while the resting nude person begins it at the environment temperature 31°C [5]. In low ambient temperature also, the healthy body releases sweat due to increases in the metabolic rate during the activity.
During the activity period, the metabolic rate increases and produces a large amount of heat energy. If the surplus metabolic heat energy cannot dissipate, it affects the heart in the blood circulation and may lead to stroke or heart attack, indicating thermoregulatory failure in the body. So the excess heat energy is lost through the perspiration process from the skin and controls the body temperature normal. When environment temperature increases, there is a greater dependence on evaporative heat loss to defending the body core temperature. At a high activity period, the body maintains thermal balance to augment evaporative cooling by activating both eccrine and apocrine sweat glands, secrete sweat on the skin surface, and keep the body in thermoregulation. In more hot and humid conditions, although a person sweats heavily, it usually does not feel cold because the sweat cannot evaporate and take latent heat, and it simply drips off the body. Besides, in a dry climate, the sweat generally evaporates, without wetting the skin surface, by the heat supplies on the skin surface, and maintain the body temperature.
Else ways in acclimatization, it is not sure that the higher temperature will always evaporate the sweat. e sweat may start dripping for a person who is not using the warm environment; the body heat transmission through evaporation becomes ineffective. But if the person gets used to the hot environment, he will look drier and feel cold due to evaporative cooling. A high active person acclimatizes heat to produce several liters of sweat per hour and helps to reduce the body temperature and prevents hyperthermia disorder. e average healthy person has a normal body core temperature between 36.1°C and 37.8°C. It may fall by 2°C in the cold environment at rest. During light intensity activities in a hot environment, the average sweating rate is 170.83 ml/ hour. But the maximum sweating rate is increased to 3.7 liters per hour for strenuous physical exercise in the same hot environment [3]. It shows that sweat loss is affected significantly by the activity level.
Muscles are the principal source of metabolic heat energy. It may produce up to 90% of the total metabolic energy of the body in light intensity activities and helps to decrease body weight by increasing the movement of cardiovascular organs [6]. e quantity of muscle mass determines the BMR in the human body. It depends on body surface area, age, gender, and hormones. e average BMR in a healthy human body is 1114 w/m 3 [7]. Besides this BMR, the body produces additional metabolic energy during the activity. According to energy expenditure by the body, the estimation value of metabolic rate during walking is 3889.43 w/m 3 and during cleaning is 3266.67 w/m 3 . e scale of metabolic rate during various light activities is presented in Table 1.
Skin is the thermal receptors organ that identifies the environment variables. If any illness occurs in the body, the symptom first shows by changing its temperature. In mathematical treatments of temperature distribution, the skin membrane is regarded as a physical and physiological barrier with a complex structure. Generally, the human body has a different skin thickness, and it depends on the location of the body. So in this model, two skin sets having different thicknesses are taken. Each skin set is divided into the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue layers. e overlying outer layer epidermis contains several layers of dead cells. ere is no metabolic activity and no blood flow. e middle layer dermis contains the network of blood cells, blood capillaries, lymphatics, nerves, sweat glands having different parameter values dependence on position and tissue temperature. e innermost subcutaneous tissue contains fat and adipose tissue saturates with active cells and blood vessels. Skin responses peripheral vasoconstriction and vasodilation processes refer to a change in blood vessel size which affects its temperature by changing the rate of blood flow. e vasoconstriction process occurs if the skin temperature reduces by low environment temperature. e vasodilation process occurs if the skin has a high temperature to keeps the body temperature normal. e blood flow has a high concentration and metabolic rate increased during activity, which helps to increase the skin layers temperature [9]. ese show that the skin temperature is more during activities than at rest.
When the environment temperature changes, the body mechanism works differently and keeps the body in thermoregulation. If the ambient temperature is lower than the body temperature, the body losses heat to the environment. e body maintains temperature by producing heat energy by shivering process in muscles and helps to raise the body temperature.
e contribution of heat production by the body core is higher than the contribution of skin, with ratio of about 4 : 1 by shivering, and maintains the body temperature [4]. ese show that the body core brings a significant change in skin temperature and change with a small range in body core temperature.
When the surrounding temperature is more than body temperature, the body gains the heat energy from the surrounding. e eccrine sweat glands continuously release a large amount of sweat so, the sweat glands are controlled by the sympathetic nervous system in the body. At ambient temperatures 25°C, the estimated value of sweat evaporation rate from the body is 24.792 × 10 − 6 kg/m 2 s and 25.410 × 10 − 6 kg/m 2 s at rest, and walking, respectively. e scale of sweat rate loss at different ambient temperatures 15°C, 25°C, 35°C, and 45°C at rest and walking is presented in Table 2.
Blood perfusion refers to the process of delivery of arteries blood to a capillaries bed in the living tissues. is process works either to dissipate the heat or reheat the cooled area to keep the body temperature normal. Tissue blood flow is the amount of blood flow through the capillaries of the vascular bed of that structure or region. Pennes' in 1948 formulated a model by conducting a sequence of experiments measuring temperatures of tissue and arterial blood in the resting human forearm. e rate of heat transfer between blood and local tissue is proportional to the product of a volumetric perfusion rate and temperature gradient between arterial blood temperature and the local tissue temperature [10]. e model is prepared by using the thermal diffusion effect, metabolic rate, and effect of blood perfusion on the energy balance within the tissue. ese effects were included in the standard thermal energy conservation equation and modeled as Pennes's bio-heat equation (1). (2) e blood temperature is assumed to be constant arterial blood temperature. e perfusion rate increases highly, and the muscle activities increase slowly during light activities [11]. e development of the temperature distribution model in the past period was mainly based without considering the layers of dermal parts. No models of metabolic rate during activity are presented. But nowadays, the rapid development of information and computer technology made it easy for the researcher to model the temperature distribution of the human dermal parts by dividing it into several layers. ere is continuous development for constructing the thermal models in the formulation of heat transfer in living tissues after the investigation of the bio-heat equation by Pennes'.
Gurung and Acharya [1] studied the sweat releasing rate in males and females. e result showed that the sweat releasing rate in the female is lower than male due to the lower density of sweat glands and hormones in the female. Nadel et al. [12] studied the relation between the body core, skin temperature, and sweat evaporation in the body. ey suggested that sweat rate is proportional to the gradient temperature between the body core and skin temperatures. Saxena and Arya [13] have studied the steady-state temperature distribution in the skin and subcutaneous tissue (SST). ey considered the three layers, epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue of the SST region by assuming that skin is exposed to a dry and cool environment with negligible perspiration. e authors used the different values of physiological parameters in this model. Gurung et al. [14] investigated the finite element method approach to onedimensional unsteady state temperature distribution in human dermal parts with quadratic shape function. e authors developed the model of temperature distribution in skin three layers, namely, epidermis, dermis, and underlying tissue layer. In this model, they assumed that the outer skin is exposed to the atmosphere and heat loss occurs due to convection radiation and evaporation of water.
Acharya et al. [15] divided the dermal part into six skin layers and studied the metabolic effect in thermoregulation on human males and females. Agrawal [8] and Kenefick et al. [16] experimentally investigated the amount of energy expenditure during cooking, cleaning, and walking. Khanday and Saxena [17] studied the thermoregulation in the human head exposed in a cold environment. e model incorporates biochemical reactions concerning heat generation, blood circulation, and other biophysical activities. Agrawal et al. [18] established a model in a human limb for the temperature distribution by assuming an irregular tapered shaped limb with a different radius and eccentricity. Saxena and Arya [13] and Saxena and Gupta [19] published the papers on the effect of blood flow and heat flow in human skin and subcutaneous tissue by using variational finite element method. Kumari and Adlakha [20] made a mathematical model and investigated the temperature distribution in human peripheral regions including the blood mass flow rate, thermal conductivity, and metabolic heat generation rate which are constants during and after the exercise. Numerous researchers developed the model by using the constant metabolic rate and provided the temperature profile of different skin layers in human dermal parts. So this research paper is studying the temperature distribution in human dermal parts due to the sweating effect, carried out by various activities. e finite element method is used for the discretization of the domain. Since the SST region of the human body is neither smooth nor rough to each other, the layers in the SST region may be of irregular shapes also. So, it is challenging to obtain the exact solution to heat transfer. e finite element method provides the guideline to divide the whole region  into a finite number of elements and assemble the results. e FEM also provides all the elements in the symmetric matrices form and converges to the exact solution. e accuracy of the solution increases if the number of elements is increasing. us, this technique is a suitable numerical method to find the approximation solution for the temperature distribution on the dermal region under any atmospheric conditions.

Behavior of Metabolic Energy.
e metabolic rate increases due to an increase in the rate of blood flow. e continuous increase in blood flow is controlled by the body mechanism rapidly producing metabolic energy at the beginning of the activity and becomes constant after a certain time. us, the metabolic rate shows the logical behavior during activities. We consider the metabolic rate Q m (t) equation based on activity as where Q 0 is the basal metabolic rate, t is activity period, A is activity threshold metabolism, α is an activity-controlled parameter per unit time, and t s is the Sigmoid's midpoint of the curve over time t for extensive exercise. Figure 1 represents the unsteady behavior of metabolic rates of the normal human body during the various activities in the 1800 seconds (half-hour) period. In the normal human body, the body core temperature ranges between 36.1°C and 37.2°C. e figure shows the threshold metabolic value during the cooking is 2212.16 w/m 3 , during cleaning is 3266.67 w/m 3 , and during walking is 3889.43 w/m 3 at α � 0.01/sec, and t s � 500 sec with BMR � 1114 w/m 3 .

Behavior of Sweat Evaporation.
e sweat evaporation in the body depends on skin temperature. e skin temperature also depends on the level of activity and ambient temperature. At a high ambient temperature and high metabolic rate, the body produces more sweat than in low ambient temperature and at rest. is shows that the rate of sweat evaporation is increased by increasing the ambient temperature and have linear behavior. e sweat evaporation rate (E st ) equation is based on the ambient temperature as e symbol T st in equation (4) is the skin surface temperature which depends on the ambient temperature and T b � 37°C is the body core temperature [21]. Figure 2 represents the behavior of sweat evaporation rate at rest and during walking at ambient temperatures 15°C, 25°C, 35°C, and 45°C. e data of sweat rates are taken from Table 2.

Modified Bioheat Equation
e formulated bio-heat transfer model equation established by Pennes' [10] and Perl [22] describes the effect of conduction, perfusion, and metabolism in the human tissue. During the activity period, the surplus metabolic heat energy arises and dissipates from the body to the environment by its mechanism. e resulting bio-heat equation with metabolic energy is modified by

Discretization.
Skin is the largest organ of the body and has several functions. It forms a physical barrier to the environment, allowing and limiting the inward and outward passage of water and various substances. It maintains body temperature with the help of various physiological parameters.
e thickness of the skin layer is important for controlling body temperature normal. In this study, the thickness of the skin is divided into the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue layers. Each layer is measured perpendicularly from the outer skin surface towards the body core. Let y 1 , y 2 , and y 3 be the distance of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue, respectively, measured from the outer surface of the skin. e thickness of the epidermis is y 1 , the dermis is y 2 − y 1 , and subcutaneous tissue is y 3 − y 2 . e schematic diagram of the temperature distribution model in dermal parts of the human body is presented in Figure 3.
Let T 0 , T 1 , and T 2 be the nodal temperatures at a distance of x � 0, x � y 1 , x � y 2 , respectively. T 3 is the body core temperature at a distance of x � y 3 . Let T (0) , T (1) , and T (2) be the temperature functions of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue, respectively. e heat regulation in in vivo tissue of human skin layers during various activities is given by the partial differential equation (Pennes' bioheat equation), which can be written for 1D as where M � ρ b c b w b (J/m 3s°C ).

Boundary
Condition at x � 0 (Skin Surface). e outer surface of the body is exposed to the environment during the activity period. erefore, heat flux is dissipated for x � 0 and, heat loss takes place from the outer surface due to conduction, convection, radiation, and evaporation processes. So the net heat flux calculated by Robin's boundary condition changes to where L, h, T ∞ , and T st are the latent heat capacity, combined heat transfer coefficient due to convection and radiation, ambient temperature, and skin surface temperature, respectively.

Boundary Condition at x � y 3 (Body Core).
During the light activity, due to the slow movement of muscle mass, there is negligible change in metabolic heat energy, so all the metabolic energy dissipates instantaneously at that time; the body core temperature is controlled to 37°C. So, the Dirichlet's inner boundary condition during the activity period is taken as where T b is the body core temperature and y 3 is the total thickness of skin. Using Euler-Lagrange formula, the variational integral form of equations (6) and (7) is given by where Ω � skin layered domain. In this model, the physical and physiological parameters depending on the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue are given in Table 3.
Let I k , for k � 1, 2, 3, be the integral solutions of three layers, epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue, respectively, with I � 3 k�1 I k . Solving the integrals I 1 , I 2 , and I 3 with parameters as mentioned in Table 3, we obtain the T (2) Epidermis Dermis Subcutaneous tissue

Mathematical Problems in Engineering
Mathematical Problems in Engineering solution I 1 , I 2 , and I 3 as functions of nodal values T 0 , T 1 , T 2 , as given as follows: where A i , B i , D i , E i , F i , and C j with 1 ≤ i ≤ 3 and 2 ≤ j ≤ 3 are all constants whose values depend on physical and physiological parameters of dermal parts as given in Table 4. To obtain the result, differentiate I 1 , I 2 , and I 3 with respect to T 0 , T 1 , and T 2 and set (dI/dT k ) � 0, for k � 0, 1, 2. On simplification, we obtain system of equations in matrix form: where C �

Numerical Results and Discussion
During physical activities, walking, cleaning, and cooking, the doorsill values of metabolic rates are 3889.43 w/m 3 , 3266.67 w/m 3 , and 2212.16 w/m 3 , respectively. In this model, two sets of skin layers thickness set I and set II are taken as in Table 5 and sweat evaporation rates for different ambient temperatures during various activities for the skin set I and set II are presented in Tables 6 and 7, respectively. e values of physical and physiological parameters used for numerical simulation are taken as given in Table 4.
Under normal conditions, the temperature decreases from the body core towards the skin surface. So we consider T 0 , T 1 , and T 2 to be in linear order towards body core at t � 0. us we assume the equation where κ is an adoption constant in equation (13) and is calculated by using T b � 37°C at x � y 3 . For the initial value of the interface temperatures, we consider the skin surface temperature as 22.87°C. Equation (11) is solved by using the Crank-Nicolson method. e Crank-Nicolson method provides Here, Δt is the time interval and T (0) is the initial nodal temperature in 3 × 1 matrix form. For the steady case of the model, we obtain the following matrix form of the system of algebraic equation:

Steady State
Results. e steady-state temperature results of the natural skin layers epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue (SST) at the various ambient temperatures T ∞ � 15°C, 25°C, 35°C, and 45°C, during cooking, cleaning, and walking, are presented through the graph in Figures 4-8 and Tables 8 and 9 for skin sets I and II by solving the system of equation (15). Figures 4(a)-4(c) represent the steady state temperatures of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue at T ∞ � 15°C, 25°C, 35°C, and 45°C during cooking, cleaning, and walking, respectively, for skin set I. Its numerical results are presented in Table 8. Figures 5(a)-5(c) indicate the interface temperatures of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue at T ∞ � 15°C, 25°C, 35°C, and 45°C during cooking, cleaning, and walking, respectively, for skin set II and obtained values are shown in Table 9.
Both results exhibit that each steady state temperature of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue during walking    Table 4: Parameter values used in model [1,14].
Cooking for skin set I  is more than cooking and cleaning, because during walking the body consumes more oxygen and produces more metabolic heat energy as compared to cleaning and cooking at each ambient temperature. Furthermore, the steady state skin layers temperature at high ambient temperature is more than at low ambient temperature during each activity. ese are due to the fact that at high ambient temperature the blood vessels dilate, and the sweat glands begin to secrete more sweat than in low ambient temperature during each activity. e steady state interface temperatures of the SST region during cooking, cleaning, and walking at (a) T ∞ � 25°C and (b) T ∞ � 45°C are compared in Figures 6(a) and 6(b), respectively, for skin set II. e obtained numerical results are presented in Table 9. e numerical results analyzed that steady state temperatures of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue are slightly higher by 0.13°C, 0.15°C, and 0.18°C, during walking than cooking in both ambient temperatures 25°C and 45°C. e results exhibit that during walking, the body generates more heat energy as compared to cooking and some surplus heat energy losses from the body through the sweat in the form of water, and the body keeps in thermoregulation. Figures 7(a) and 7(b) show the comparison of steady state interface temperatures of the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue between the skin set I and skin set II, during cleaning at T ∞ � 15°C and the 35°C and walking at T ∞ � 25°C and 45°C, respectively. ese results demonstrate that epidermis layer temperature is increased by 0.62°C, the dermis layer temperature is increased by 0.71°C, and subcutaneous tissue temperature is increased by 0.64°C in skin set I than skin set II at T ∞ � 15°C. At T ∞ � 35°C also the steady state temperatures of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue are, respectively, higher by 0.40°C, 0.40°C, and 0.26°C in skin set I than the skin set II during cleaning.
During walking, the steady state interface temperatures of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue are, respectively, increased by 0.48°C, 0.51°C, and 0.39°C, at T ∞ � 25°C and 0.25°C, 0.19°C, and 0.01°C, at T ∞ � 45°C in skin set I than skin set II. Both results predict that the thickness of skin layers plays an important role to maintains body temperature. Figure 8 reveals that each steady state temperature of epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue during walking is raised by 0.21°C, 0.25°C, and 0.30°C from at rest with temperatures 35.16°C, 35.55°C, and 36.00°C due to increasing the rate of oxygen consumption in the blood.

Unsteady State Results.
e numerical calculation for the unsteady state temperatures solution T i (i � 0, 1, 2) is carried out by solving the system of equation (11). e temperature T 2 shows the highest and reaches the steady state temperature later at T ∞ � 45°C as compared to the other ambient temperatures due to the metabolic effects shown in Figure 9 during cleaning; even the sweating rate is higher at a high ambient temperature. Figure 10 shows the unsteady state temperatures T 0 and T 1 reach steady state temperature with temperature gradient 0.21°C at T ∞ � 45°C and 0.78°C at T ∞ � 15°during cooking for skin set I. ese results show that the high ambient temperature affects more the epidermis layer's temperature than the dermis layer's temperature due to the epidermis layer being closer to the environment. Furthermore, in a high ambient temperature, the dermis layer's temperature is closer to the epidermis layer's temperature due to the cause of sweat evaporation and is nearer to the body core.
e graph of Figure 11 shows that the unsteady state temperatures T 1 almost coincide with each other during walking, cleaning, and cooking at the same ambient temperature, because during walking the body produces more metabolic heat energy and releases more heat in the form of sweat than cooking and cleaning. e metabolic energy affects very little body temperature variation.
On comparing T 0 between skin set I and set II in Figure 12, T 0 is higher and reach steady earlier for skin set I as a comparison to the skin set II. ese are due to the cause of lean muscle mass considering the less thickness of skin set I than skin set II. e unsteady state temperature T 2 decreases fast initially and then immediately increases as shown in Figure 13 Table 8: Estimation of nodal temperature in dermal layers at various sweat evaporation rates at rest and during cooking, cleaning, and walking for skin set I.

Position
T  Table 9: Estimation of nodal temperature in dermal layers at various sweat evaporation rates at rest and during cooking, cleaning, and walking for skin set II.
Position e figure reveals that T 1 gradually increases from the beginning, reaching a steady state temperature.
ese results exhibit that the steady state temperature T 2 is higher by 0.78°C than the steady state temperature T 1 . Furthermore, the unsteady state temperature T 2 approaches steady temperature faster than T 1 , because in subcutaneous tissue the metabolic rate increases due to an increase in the lean muscle mass and loss the adipose fat tissue during the activity. Figures 14 and 15 indicate the unsteady state temperatures T 0 and T 2 approach the steady state temperatures after the periods of approximately 990 seconds and 560 seconds, respectively, for skin set I and approximately after the periods of 1640 seconds and 1390 seconds, respectively, for skin set II. Both figures have shown that the unsteady state temperature T 2 reaches faster the steady state temperature as compared to T 0 . e results also exhibit that the unsteady state temperatures of skin set I reach earlier the steady state temperatures than the skin set II due to the thermal law of cooling.  All the figures of the unsteady state nodal temperature of each layer demonstrate that the temperature of each layer rises at the beginning of each activity and quickly reaches steady state temperatures by releasing sweat. ese scores execute that sweat evaporation plays a crucial role in thermoregulation in the human body. e above results also reveal that the steady state temperatures T i , (i � 0, 1, 2) are almost similar in both steady and unsteady cases during cooking, cleaning, and walking, at the same ambient temperature and same skin thickness.

Conclusion
e results in the model show that, on increasing the metabolic energy, steady state interface temperature of skin layers increases. e steady state temperature of each skin layer also rises on raising the ambient temperature, because of the circulating blood near the skin surface heat in both situations. But due to the doorsill value of body core temperature, the body produces necessary sweat, controls the body temperature, and keeps the body normal. It reveals that sweat evaporation plays the leading role in protecting the body from hyperthermia disorder at high ambient temperature.
In low ambient temperature (15°C and 25°C), the thinner skin layer releases more sweat than the thicker skin layer due to a high metabolic rate that occurs in a cold environment in thin skin layers. But at high ambient temperatures (35°C and 45°C), the thicker skin layer produces more sweat than the thinner skin layer due to more blood flow rate in a hot environment in the thicker skin layer. e results predict that the thickness of the skin layers also plays a vital role to control body temperature.
Previously, the researchers developed models in the temperature distribution in the human dermal part that has not determined the metabolic rate during the activities period. So this model is prepared for the realistic temperature distribution in dermal parts of the human body due to the effect of metabolic rate and ambient temperature controlled by sweat evaporation during activities. So, this paper will be helpful to maintain the physical structure for younger elderly and old elderly from sarcopenia. It also helps to develop the models regarding moderate-and high-intensity exercises as wrestling players, mountain climbers, cyclists, typist, etc., based on their physical and physiological characters. Data Availability e data used to support the findings of this study are included within the article.

Conflicts of Interest
e authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.