• Title/Summary/Keyword: mobile toilets

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A Study on Uses Case of IoT Mobile Toilet (IoT가 접목된 이동형 임대 화장실의 활용량 측정 사례 연구)

  • Kim, Yu-Doo;Jung, Yong-jin;Kwon, Soon-bum
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Information and Commucation Sciences Conference
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    • 2017.10a
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    • pp.729-730
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    • 2017
  • There are many events such as festival or assembly. Toilets are needed in these events. Therefore, there are many companies that rental of mobile toilets. But these companies provide only rental of toilet. So in this research, we provide IT services using sensor into mobile toilets. And then has analysed that how to using sensor data from mobile toilets.

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Idea for design of mobile toilets through liquidity space (공간의 유동(流動)화를 통한 이동식 화장실 디자인 제안)

  • Lee, Jung-Eun
    • Proceeding of Spring/Autumn Annual Conference of KHA
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    • 2006.11a
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    • pp.216-219
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    • 2006
  • A change is performed in socially a lot of places by elevations about the quality of life. Most construction balls are created mainly to spaces for an individuality or a specific community, but a space for public convenience is the situation that will gain gradually. While these public space increases, there is a public toilet to an increasing trend too. Think about Cubic Puzzle that it is one total space, and put one function to each Module. The small-scale Cubic space achieves a lot of changes by any energies, and a small-scale space compounds through energies to affect mobile and expansion, and the changed Cubic space does diversification of suitable mobile toilet space configuration to a local need in order to look.

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Developing an Index of Usability to Evaluate Utilization of Mobile Toilets among the Elderly: A Case Study (고령자의 이동변기에 대한 사용성평가 지표 개발 : 사례 연구)

  • Kim, Seonchil;Lim, Hyunsub;Cho, Sunghyoun
    • Journal of The Korean Society of Integrative Medicine
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.83-92
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    • 2018
  • Purpose : The purpose of this study was to develop an index of usability that reflects the needs and characteristics of the elderly. The usability index is used primarily to assess issues in the usability of a product. Methods : In this study, 22 items for mobile toilet usability index were developed by consulting with 12 elderly users, 6 caregivers, and 12 experts. The usability evaluation index was intended to increase reliability through preliminary and main evaluations. In addition, the validity of the items used as the usability evaluation index was verified to prove that the index is effective for the evaluation. Result : The usability index is a welfare tool developed by gathering data from various sources such as previous studies dealing with usability evaluation, characteristics of users, range of use, and environment of product use. Conclusion : The development of the usability index for mobile toilets was useful for the user to quantitatively derive the problem of the product. Consequently, user needs and usability problems can be identified, which can help improve product quality.

Dose Rate of Restroom in Facilities using Radioisotope (방사성동위원소 사용시설(내/외) 화장실의 외부선량률)

  • Cho, Yong-Gwi;An, Seong-Min
    • Journal of radiological science and technology
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    • v.39 no.2
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    • pp.237-246
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    • 2016
  • This study is therefore aimed at measuring the surface dose rate and the spatial dose rate in and outside the radionuclide facility in order to ensure safety of the patients, radiation workers and family care-givers in their use of such equipment and to provide a basic framework for further research on radiation protection. The study was conducted at 4 restrooms in and outside the radionuclide facility of a general hospital in Incheon between May 1 and July 31, 2014. During the study period, the spatial contamination dose rate and the surface contamination dose rate before and after radiation use were measured at the 4 places-thyroid therapy room, PET center, gamma camera room, and outpatient department. According to the restroom use survey by hospitals, restrooms in the radionuclide facility were used not only by patients but also by family care-givers and some of radiation workers. The highest cumulative spatial radiation dose rate was 8.86 mSv/hr at camera room restroom, followed by 7.31 mSv/hr at radioactive iodine therapy room restroom, 2.29 mSv/hr at PET center restroom, and 0.26 mSv/hr at outpatient department restroom, respectively. The surface radiation dose rate measured before and after radiation use was the highest at toilets, which are in direct contact with patient's excretion, followed by the center and the entrance of restrooms. Unsealed radioactive sources used in nuclear medicine are relatively safe due to short half lives and low energy. A patient who received those radioactive sources, however, may become a mobile radioactive source and contaminate areas the patient contacts-camera room, sedation room, and restroom-through secretion and excretion. Therefore, patients administered radionuclides should be advised to drink sufficient amounts of water to efficiently minimize radiation exposure to others by reducing the biological half-life, and members of the public-family care-givers, pregnant women, and children-be as far away from the patients until the dose remains below the permitted dose limit.