Large-scale flow field and aerosol particle transport investigations in a classroom using 2D-Shake-The-Box Lagrangian Particle Tracking

Infections with COVID-19 in enclosed public spaces, where virus-laden aerosol particles can accumulate over time, have significantly contributed to the rapid spread of the virus. It is therefore of great importance to understand the transport and dispersion process of aerosol particles in such space...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tom Buchwald, Gazi Hasanuzzaman, Sebastian Merbold, Daniel Schanz, Christoph Egbers, Andreas Schröder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-12-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584402310034X
Description
Summary:Infections with COVID-19 in enclosed public spaces, where virus-laden aerosol particles can accumulate over time, have significantly contributed to the rapid spread of the virus. It is therefore of great importance to understand the transport and dispersion process of aerosol particles in such spaces, especially against the background of future pandemics. In this work, we present a Lagrangian-Particle-Tracking experiment to assess the mixed convective flow in a classroom with different ventilation strategies. For this purpose, thermal plumes were created by heated dummies, and a collimated LED light-sheet with ∼0.4 m thickness was used for illumination of helium filled soap bubbles (HFSB) acting as passive tracer particles. In this way, the Lagrangian trajectories of the particles were recorded at two approximately 4.2 m × 2.8 m large fields using the novel 2D-Shake-The-Box-Method. As a result, time-resolved trajectories of over 300,000 simultaneously tracked HFSB have been reconstructed, so that both small-scale and large-scale properties of the flow are visualized quantitatively across the entire cross-section of the room. The trajectories show that the thermal plumes create lengthwise circulating vortices, which cannot be destroyed across the entire cross-section of the room by opening or tilting a window. Furthermore, the mixing in the room through the operation of an air purifier is higher compared to opening a window, which suggests that this strategy in combination with its air filtering capability is the most effective strategy to prevent infections.
ISSN:2405-8440