{"title":"室内气流对教室空气传播疾病的影响","authors":"Mojtaba Zabihi, Ri Li, Joshua Brinkerhoff","doi":"10.1007/s12273-023-1097-y","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>It has been widely accepted that the most effective way to mitigate airborne disease transmission in an indoor space is to increase the ventilation airflow, measured in air change per hour (ACH). However, increasing ACH did not effectively prevent the spread of COVID-19. To better understand the role of ACH and airflow large-scale patterns, a comprehensive fully transient computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation of two-phase flows based on a discrete phase model (DPM) was performed in a university classroom setting with people present. The investigations encompass various particle sizes, ventilation layouts, and flow rates. The findings demonstrated that the particle size threshold at which particles are deemed airborne is highly influenced by the background flow strength and large-scale flow pattern, ranging from 5 µm to 10 µm in the cases investigated. The effects of occupants are significant and must be precisely accounted for in respiratory particle transport studies. An enhanced ventilation design (UFAD-CDR) for university classrooms is introduced that places a premium on mitigating airborne disease spread. Compared to the baseline design at the same ACH, this design successfully reduced the maximum number density of respiratory particles by up to 85%. A novel airflow-related parameter, Horizontality, is introduced to quantify and connect the large-scale airflow pattern with indoor aerosol transport. This underscores that ACH alone cannot ensure or regulate air quality. 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To better understand the role of ACH and airflow large-scale patterns, a comprehensive fully transient computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation of two-phase flows based on a discrete phase model (DPM) was performed in a university classroom setting with people present. The investigations encompass various particle sizes, ventilation layouts, and flow rates. The findings demonstrated that the particle size threshold at which particles are deemed airborne is highly influenced by the background flow strength and large-scale flow pattern, ranging from 5 µm to 10 µm in the cases investigated. The effects of occupants are significant and must be precisely accounted for in respiratory particle transport studies. An enhanced ventilation design (UFAD-CDR) for university classrooms is introduced that places a premium on mitigating airborne disease spread. Compared to the baseline design at the same ACH, this design successfully reduced the maximum number density of respiratory particles by up to 85%. A novel airflow-related parameter, Horizontality, is introduced to quantify and connect the large-scale airflow pattern with indoor aerosol transport. This underscores that ACH alone cannot ensure or regulate air quality. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
人们普遍认为,减少室内空间空气传播疾病的最有效方法是增加通风气流(以每小时换气次数(ACH)计算)。然而,增加 ACH 并不能有效防止 COVID-19 的传播。为了更好地了解 ACH 和气流大尺度模式的作用,我们在有人员在场的大学教室环境中对基于离散相模型(DPM)的两相流进行了全面的全瞬态计算流体动力学(CFD)模拟。研究包括各种颗粒大小、通风布局和流速。研究结果表明,颗粒被视为空气传播的粒径阈值受背景流动强度和大尺度流动模式的影响很大,在所调查的案例中,阈值从 5 微米到 10 微米不等。居住者的影响很大,必须在呼吸道颗粒物传输研究中精确考虑。本文介绍了一种适用于大学教室的增强型通风设计(UFAD-CDR),其重点在于减少空气传播疾病。与同一教室的基线设计相比,该设计成功地将呼吸道颗粒的最大数量密度降低了 85%。引入了一个与气流相关的新参数--水平度,以量化大尺度气流模式并将其与室内气溶胶传播联系起来。这突出表明,仅靠 ACH 无法确保或调节空气质量。除了空气交换所需的 ACH 外,最大限度地减少水平散射运动对于降低室内气溶胶的传播也至关重要。
Influence of indoor airflow on airborne disease transmission in a classroom
It has been widely accepted that the most effective way to mitigate airborne disease transmission in an indoor space is to increase the ventilation airflow, measured in air change per hour (ACH). However, increasing ACH did not effectively prevent the spread of COVID-19. To better understand the role of ACH and airflow large-scale patterns, a comprehensive fully transient computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation of two-phase flows based on a discrete phase model (DPM) was performed in a university classroom setting with people present. The investigations encompass various particle sizes, ventilation layouts, and flow rates. The findings demonstrated that the particle size threshold at which particles are deemed airborne is highly influenced by the background flow strength and large-scale flow pattern, ranging from 5 µm to 10 µm in the cases investigated. The effects of occupants are significant and must be precisely accounted for in respiratory particle transport studies. An enhanced ventilation design (UFAD-CDR) for university classrooms is introduced that places a premium on mitigating airborne disease spread. Compared to the baseline design at the same ACH, this design successfully reduced the maximum number density of respiratory particles by up to 85%. A novel airflow-related parameter, Horizontality, is introduced to quantify and connect the large-scale airflow pattern with indoor aerosol transport. This underscores that ACH alone cannot ensure or regulate air quality. In addition to the necessary ACH for air exchange, minimizing horizontal bulk motion is essential for reducing aerosol transmissibility within the room.
期刊介绍:
Building Simulation: An International Journal publishes original, high quality, peer-reviewed research papers and review articles dealing with modeling and simulation of buildings including their systems. The goal is to promote the field of building science and technology to such a level that modeling will eventually be used in every aspect of building construction as a routine instead of an exception. Of particular interest are papers that reflect recent developments and applications of modeling tools and their impact on advances of building science and technology.