4.6 Article

Chamber bioaerosol study: human emissions of size-resolved fluorescent biological aerosol particles

Journal

INDOOR AIR
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 193-206

Publisher

WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/ina.12195

Keywords

UV-APS; Occupancy; Flooring; Source strength; Resuspension; Human activity

Funding

  1. Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

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Humans are a prominent source of airborne biological particles in occupied indoor spaces, but few studies have quantified human bioaerosol emissions. The chamber investigation reported here employs a fluorescence-based technique to evaluate bioaerosols with high temporal and particle size resolution. In a 75-m(3) chamber, occupant emission rates of coarse (2.5-10m) fluorescent biological aerosol particles (FBAPs) under seated, simulated office-work conditions averaged 0.9 +/- 0.3 million particles per person-h. Walking was associated with a 5-6x increase in the emission rate. During both walking and sitting, 60-70% or more of emissions originated from the floor. The increase in emissions during walking (vs. while sitting) was mainly attributable to release of particles from the floor; the associated increased vigor of upper body movements also contributed. Clothing, or its frictional interaction with human skin, was demonstrated to be a source of coarse particles, and especially of the highly fluorescent fraction. Emission rates of FBAPs previously reported for lecture classes were well bounded by the experimental results obtained in this chamber study. In both settings, the size distribution of occupant FBAP emissions had a dominant mode in the 3-5m diameter range.

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