CFD modeling of reactive species air cleaner applications in a classroom

Youngbo Won , William Bahnfleth , John Cimbala
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Abstract

Due to increasing concerns related to airborne virus spread indoors, more reactive species air cleaners are being utilized in classrooms. Reactive species generated by air cleaners decompose airborne pathogens chemically, decreasing the risk of infection. Due to the high reactivity of these oxidants, reactive species may be distributed nonuniformly in indoor environments, as are viral aerosols emitted by infectors. Heterogeneous distributions of reactive species may cause spatially non-uniform removal rates of viral aerosols. However, there is little information regarding spatial distributions of either reactive species or viral aerosols in ventilated classrooms. Thus, the objective of this study was to investigate spatial distributions of reactive species and infectious aerosols and to examine how operating conditions of air cleaners affect viral aerosol removal rates. A CFD model simulated the operation of a reactive species air cleaner generating hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in a mechanically ventilated 237 m3 classroom with nine occupants. The reactive species air cleaner showed a 3–20 times higher equivalent air change rate to a HEPA filter air cleaner with the same inlet and outlet flows. During the operation of reactive species air cleaners, elevated viral aerosol concentration was confined to regions near infectors. This was due to the high reactivity of reactive species, decreasing the infection probability of receptors from 3.2 % to 0.1 % with a 1-hour exposure time. As the room average concentration of reactive species increased from 15.6 to 50.4 ppb, both below the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) of 1000 ppb, the room average infection probability decreased from 0.3 % to 0.1 %. Due to the residence times of reactive species, the location of reactive species air cleaners affected the inactivation rate of viral aerosol, resulting in a 24 % variation of concentration difference of infectious aerosol with air cleaner locations.

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反应物空气净化器在教室中应用的 CFD 建模
由于人们越来越担心空气中的病毒会在室内传播,教室里正在使用更多的活性物质空气净化器。空气净化器产生的活性物质会对空气中的病原体进行化学分解,从而降低感染风险。由于这些氧化剂的高反应性,反应物在室内环境中的分布可能不均匀,就像感染者散发的病毒气溶胶一样。活性物质的不均匀分布可能会导致病毒气溶胶的去除率在空间上不均匀。然而,有关通风教室中活性物质或病毒气溶胶空间分布的信息很少。因此,本研究的目的是调查活性物质和传染性气溶胶的空间分布,并研究空气净化器的运行条件如何影响病毒气溶胶的去除率。CFD 模型模拟了在一间机械通风的 237 立方米教室中,一台产生过氧化氢(H2O2)的活性物质空气净化器的运行情况。在进出口流量相同的情况下,活性物质空气净化器的等效换气率是高效空气过滤器空气净化器的 3-20 倍。在反应型空气净化器运行期间,病毒气溶胶浓度升高的区域仅限于感染者附近。这是由于活性物质的高反应性,在 1 小时的暴露时间内,受体的感染概率从 3.2% 降至 0.1%。随着室内活性物质的平均浓度从 15.6 ppb 增加到 50.4 ppb(均低于美国职业安全与健康管理局(OSHA)规定的 1000 ppb 的允许接触限值),室内平均感染概率从 0.3 % 下降到 0.1 %。由于活性物质的停留时间,活性物质空气净化器的位置会影响病毒气溶胶的灭活率,导致感染性气溶胶的浓度差异随空气净化器位置的不同而变化 24%。
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