4.7 Article

Effect of recirculation zones on the ventilation of a public washroom

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0064337

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The study found that in a shared washroom, the washbasin near the door is in a prominent recirculation zone, leading to longer residence time for infectious aerosol. Ventilation rate is determined by the air residence time in recirculation zone, and increasing fan flow rate can shorten the ventilation time.
Air-borne transmission can pose a major risk of infection spread in enclosed spaces. Venting the air out using exhaust fans and ducts is a common approach to mitigate the risk. In this work, we study the air flow set up by an exhaust fan in a typical shared washroom that can be a potential hot spot for COVID-19 transmission. The primary focus is on the regions of recirculating flow that can harbor infectious aerosol for much longer than the well-ventilated parts of the room. Computational fluid dynamics is used to obtain the steady state air flow field, and Lagrangian tracking of particles gives the spatial and temporal distribution of infectious aerosol in the domain. It is found that the washbasin located next to the door is in a prominent recirculation zone, and particles injected in this region take much longer to be evacuated. The ventilation rate is found to be governed by the air residence time in the recirculation zone, and it is much higher than the timescale based on fully mixed reactor model of the room. Increasing the fan flow rate can reduce the ventilation time, but cannot eliminate the recirculation zones in the washroom.

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