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Zonal Model of Aerosol Persistence in ICUs: Utilization of Time and Space-resolved Sensor Network
Kaitlyn Glenn; Jiayang He; Robert Rochlin; Selina Teng; James Hecker; Igor Novosselov.
Affiliation
  • Kaitlyn Glenn; University of Washington
  • Jiayang He; University of Washington
  • Robert Rochlin; University of Washington
  • Selina Teng; University of Washington
  • James Hecker; University of Washington
  • Igor Novosselov; University of Washington
Preprint in En | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-22271831
ABSTRACT
The COVID-19 pandemic heightened public awareness about airborne particulate matter (PM) due to the spread of infectious diseases via aerosols. The persistence of potentially infectious aerosol in public spaces, particularly medical settings, deserves close investigation; however, approaches for rapidly parameterizing the temporospatial distribution of particles released by an infected individual have not been reported in literature. This paper presents a methodology for mapping the movement of aerosol plumes using a network of low-cost PM sensors in ICUs. Mimicking aerosol generation by a patient, we tracked aerosolized NaCl particles functioning as tracers for potentially infectious aerosols. In positive (closed door) and neutral-pressure (open door) ICUs, an aerosol spike was detected outside the room, with up to 6% or 19% of all PM escaping through the door gaps, respectively. The outside sensors registered no aerosol spike in negative-pressure ICUs. The K-means clustering analysis of temporospatial data suggests three distinct zones (1) near the aerosol source, (2) room periphery, and (3) immediately outside the room. These zones inform two-phase aerosol plume behavior dispersion of the original aerosol spike throughout the room, and evacuation phase where "well-mixed" PM decayed uniformly. Decay rates were calculated for 4 ICUs in positive, neutral, and negative mode, with negative modes decaying the fastest. This research demonstrates the methodology for aerosol persistence monitoring in medical settings; however, it is limited by a relatively small data set. Future studies need to evaluate medical settings with high risks of infectious disease, assess risks of airborne disease transmission, and optimize hospital infrastructure.
License
cc_by_nd
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Type of study: Experimental_studies / Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Type of study: Experimental_studies / Prognostic_studies Language: En Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint