4.7 Article

Impact of natural ventilation on exposure to SARS-CoV 2 in indoor/semi-indoor terraces using CO2 concentrations as a proxy

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUILDING ENGINEERING
Volume 46, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jobe.2021.103725

Keywords

CFD; CO2; Indoor/semi-indoor environments; Natural ventilation; Relative exposure; SARS-CoV 2

Funding

  1. [S2018/EMT-4329]
  2. [RTI2018-099 138-B-I00]

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This study evaluates the relative exposure to SARS-CoV 2 in enclosed and semi-enclosed terraces under different outdoor meteorological conditions using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modelling. The research shows that spatial average concentrations decrease with ventilation increase, but concentrations can vary significantly based on people arrangement.
Nowadays, it is necessary a better airborne transmission understanding of respiratory diseases in shared indoor and semi-indoor environments with natural ventilation in order to adopt effective people's health protection measures. The aim of this work is to evaluate the relative exposure to SARS-CoV 2 in a set of virtual scenarios representing enclosed and semi-enclosed terraces under different outdoor meteorological conditions. For this purpose, indoor CO2 concentration is used as a proxy for the risk assessment. Airflow and people exhaled CO2 in different scenarios are simulated through Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modelling with Unsteady ReynoldsAveraged Navier-Stokes (URANS) approach. Both spatial average concentrations and local concentrations are analyzed. In general, spatial average concentrations decrease as ventilation increases, however, depending on the people arrangement inside the terrace, spatial average concentrations and local concentrations can be very different. Therefore, for assessing the relative exposure to SARS-CoV 2 it is necessary to consider the indoor flow patterns between infectors and susceptibles. This research provides detailed information about CO2 dispersion in enclosed/semienclosed scenarios, which can be very useful for reducing the transmission risk through better natural ventilation designs and improving the classic risk models since it allows to check their hypotheses in real-world scenarios. Although CFD ventilation studies in indoor/semi-indoor environments have been already addressed in the literature, this research is focused on restaurant terraces, scenarios scarcely investigated. Likewise, one of the novelties of this study is to take into account the outdoor meteorological conditions to appropriately simulate natural ventilation.

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