4.6 Article

Ventilation Strategies for Mitigation of Infection Disease Transmission in an Indoor Environment: A Case Study in Office

Journal

BUILDINGS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/buildings12020180

Keywords

ventilation strategies; COVID-19; ventilation performance; infection risk; office

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52178069, 51778385]
  2. Postgraduate Research & Practice Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province [KYCX21_0112]

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This study compared several ventilation strategies in offices and found that stratum ventilation showed the best performance in mitigating the spread of infectious diseases.
During the normalization phase of the COVID-19 epidemic, society has gradually reverted to using building space, especially for public buildings, e.g., offices. Prevention of airborne pollutants has emerged as a major challenge. Ventilation strategies can contribute to mitigating the spread of airborne disease in an indoor environment, including increasing supply air rate, modifying ventilation mode, etc. The larger ventilation rate can inevitably lead to high energy consumption, which may be also ineffective in reducing infection risk. As a critical factor affecting the spread of viral contaminant, the potential of ventilation modes for control of COVID-19 should be explored. This study compared several ventilation strategies in the office, including mixing ventilation (MV), zone ventilation (ZV), stratum ventilation (SV) and displacement ventilation (DV), through analyzing ventilation performance and infection risk for the optimal one. By using ANSYS Fluent, the distributions of airflow and pollutant were simulated under various ventilation modes and infected occupants. The SV showed greater performance in mitigating infection disease spread than MV, ZV and DV, with an air distribution performance index (ADPI) of 90.5% and minimum infection risk of 13%. This work can provide a reference for development of ventilation strategies in public space oriented the prevention of COVID-19.

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