The effect of air purifiers and curtains on aerosol dispersion and removal in multi-patient hospital rooms
Airborne transmission of disease is of concern in many indoor spaces. Here, aerosol dispersion and removal in an unoccupied 4-bed hospital room was characterized using a transient aerosol tracer experiment for 38 experiments covering 4 configurations of air purifiers and 3 configurations of curtains...
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Zusammenfassung: | Airborne transmission of disease is of concern in many indoor spaces. Here,
aerosol dispersion and removal in an unoccupied 4-bed hospital room was
characterized using a transient aerosol tracer experiment for 38 experiments
covering 4 configurations of air purifiers and 3 configurations of curtains.
NaCl particle (mass mean aerodynamic diameter $\sim 3 \mu m$) concentrations
were measured around the room following an aerosol release. Particle transport
across the room was 1.5 - 4 minutes which overlaps with the characteristic
times for significant viral deactivation and gravitational settling of larger
particles. Concentrations were close to spatially uniform except very near the
source. Short curtains had no consistent effects on concentrations at the
non-source patient locations while floor-length curtains reduced concentrations
slightly depending on the purifier configuration. The aerosol decay rate was in
most cases higher than expected from the clean air delivery rate, but the
reduction in steady-state concentrations resulting from air purifiers was less
than suggested by the decay rates. Apparently a substantial (and
configuration-dependent) fraction of the aerosol is removed immediately and
this effect is not captured by the decay rate. Overall, the combination of
curtains and purifiers is likely to reduce disease transmission in multipatient
hospital rooms. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2105.12731 |