4.1 Article

Dynamic interaction of a downward plane jet and a cough jet with respect to particle transmission: An analytical and experimental study

Journal

JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HYGIENE
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 618-631

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15459624.2017.1316383

Keywords

Airflow distribution; cough jet; downward plane jet; dynamic interaction; personal exposure

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland through the postdoctoral project POWER-PAD [259678]
  2. Luonnontieteiden ja Tekniikan Tutkimuksen Toimikunta [252708]
  3. Academy of Finland (AKA) [259678, 259678] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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A cough jet can travel beyond the breathing zone of the source person, and thus, infectious viral-and bacterial-laden particles can be transported from the source person to others in close proximity. To reduce the interpersonal transmission of coughed particles, the objective of this study was to analytically and experimentally investigate the performance of downward plane jets with various discharge velocities. Chamber measurements were conducted to examine the interaction between a transient cough jet (discharge velocities of 12 m/sec and 16 m/sec) and a steady downward plane jet (discharge velocities from 1.0-8.5 m/sec) with respect to the transport of and human exposure to coughed particles. The results show that a relatively high-speed cough can easily penetrate a downward plane jet with a discharge velocity of less than 6 m/sec. A downward plane jet with a discharge velocity of 8.5 m/sec can bend the cough jet to a certain extent. In this study, momentum comparison of the cough jet and the downward plane jet shows that the value of personal exposure to coughed particles depends on the ratio of jet momentums. The results show that when the two momentums are equivalent or if the downward plane jet has a greater momentum, the cough jet is deflected downward and does not reach the breathing zone of the target thermal dummy. Using the ratio of the two momentums, it may be estimated whether the transmission of a cough jet can be controlled. A trajectory model was developed based on the ratio of the two momentums of a cough jet and a downward jet and was validated using the experimental data. In addition, the predicted trajectory of the cough jet agreed well with the results from smoke visualization experiments. This model can be used to guide the design of downward plane jet systems for protection of occupants from coughed particles.

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