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      A novel circulated air curtain system to confine the transmission of exhaled contaminants: A numerical and experimental investigation

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          Abstract

          Air curtain is an efficient device for cutting off airflow and confining contaminants. Inspired by the ability, a circulated air curtain composed of end-to-end plane jets generated by a relay of air pillars is proposed to confine exhaled contaminants in this study. Furthermore, the optimization study of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is conducted to explore cutting-off performance and find better design parameters under different conditions, i.e., human-curtain distance, enclosure shape, jet velocity from air pillar, and exhalation modes. The multidirectional blockage and vortex-like rotative transmission routes of exhaled airflow are observed when air curtain exists. Results indicate that contaminants are concentrated around the source. The average mole fraction of exhaled contaminants outside air curtain under different human-curtain distance decreases 4.3%–19.6% compared to mixing ventilation with same flux. Shortening the human-curtain distance can improve the performance of air curtain and may change the direction of exhaled airflow. Moreover, It has better performance when the enclosure shape is close to a circle. Higher jet velocity is better for improving the confinement performance, but the trend is not very obvious as velocity increases. For exhalation modes, it is more challenging to control exhaled contaminants for intense exhalation activity (such as coughing) in steady simulation, but results in transient simulation show better performance when coughing only once. These results can provide a reference for the subsequent design and improvement in applying air curtain in hospital wards or other places, especially during the period of flu outbreak.

          Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM)

          Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at 10.1007/s12273-020-0667-5. The ESM file presents the animation of the droplet trajectory from the droplet birth at 0 s to 8 s

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          Most cited references29

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          Characterization of expiration air jets and droplet size distributions immediately at the mouth opening

          Size distributions of expiratory droplets expelled during coughing and speaking and the velocities of the expiration air jets of healthy volunteers were measured. Droplet size was measured using the interferometric Mie imaging (IMI) technique while the particle image velocimetry (PIV) technique was used for measuring air velocity. These techniques allowed measurements in close proximity to the mouth and avoided air sampling losses. The average expiration air velocity was 11.7 m/s for coughing and 3.9 m/s for speaking. Under the experimental setting, evaporation and condensation effects had negligible impact on the measured droplet size. The geometric mean diameter of droplets from coughing was 13.5 μm and it was 16.0 μm for speaking (counting 1–100). The estimated total number of droplets expelled ranged from 947 to 2085 per cough and 112–6720 for speaking. The estimated droplet concentrations for coughing ranged from 2.4 to 5.2 cm−3 per cough and 0.004–0.223 cm−3 for speaking.
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            Exhaled droplets due to talking and coughing.

            Respiratory infections can be spread via 'contact' with droplets from expiratory activities such as talking, coughing and sneezing, and also from aerosol-generating clinical procedures. Droplet sizes predominately determine the times they can remain airborne, the possibility of spread of infectious diseases and thus the strategies for controlling the infections. While significant inconsistencies exist between the existing measured data on respiratory droplets generated during expiratory activities, a food dye was used in the mouth during measurements of large droplets, which made the expiratory activities 'unnatural'. We carried out a series of experiments using glass slides and a microscope as well as an aerosol spectrometer to measure the number and size of respiratory droplets produced from the mouth of healthy individuals during talking and coughing with and without a food dye. The total mass of respiratory droplets was measured using a mask, plastic bag with tissue and an electronic balance with a high precision. Considerable subject variability was observed and the average size of droplets captured using glass slides and microscope was about 50-100 microm. Smaller droplets were also detected by the aerosol spectrometer. More droplets seemed to be generated when a food dye was used.
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              Study on transport characteristics of saliva droplets produced by coughing in a calm indoor environment

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                qianh@seu.edu.cn
                zhourong@vip.163.com
                Journal
                Build Simul
                Build Simul
                Building Simulation
                Tsinghua University Press (Beijing )
                1996-3599
                1996-8744
                4 August 2020
                : 1-13
                Affiliations
                [1 ]GRID grid.263826.b, ISNI 0000 0004 1761 0489, School of Energy and Environment, , Southeast University, ; Nanjing, 210096 China
                [2 ]GRID grid.470124.4, First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, ; Guangzhou, 510000 China
                [3 ]Guangzhou Angel Biosafety Co., Ltd, Guangzhou, 510000 China
                [4 ]GRID grid.263826.b, ISNI 0000 0004 1761 0489, Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of Solar Energy Science and Technology, School of Energy and Environment, , Southeast University, ; Nanjing, 210096 China
                Article
                667
                10.1007/s12273-020-0667-5
                7399030
                c4fa5c5d-54f9-4ebb-a0a9-3b09bc029444
                © Tsinghua University Press and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2020

                This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.

                History
                : 1 November 2019
                : 23 April 2020
                : 25 May 2020
                Categories
                Research Article

                air curtain,cfd,exhaled contaminants,cutting off,multidirectional blockage

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