Implementation of a Ventilation Protocol for SARS-CoV-2 in a Higher Educational Centre
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Direct contact between a healthy person and an infected person;
- Indirect contact or transmission through fomites, in which a healthy individual gets infected through his/her mucosae or conjunctiva after touching a contaminated object or surface;
- Close contact through respiratory droplet transmission and contact routes. “Large droplets” or “ballistic droplets” (greater than approximately 100 μm) are expelled by an infected person when coughing, sneezing and, to a lesser extent, when speaking.
2. State of the Art
2.1. Bioaerosols and SARS-CoV-2
- Pathogenic bacteria and fungi;
- Virus;
- Allergens and endotoxins;
- Pollen and plant fibres.
- The larger ones, once aspirated, do not transcend beyond the vicinity of the nostrils and mouth, since they move with difficulty and impact with the walls of those cavities;
- Bioaerosols smaller than 10 μm can penetrate deeper into the respiratory tract and the viruses contained in them can reach its receptors;
- For bioaerosols in the range around 0.3 μm, a singular fact occurs: a significant percentage of bioaerosols are deposited in the respiratory tract when inhaling and are released again when exhaling. This range matches the aerosols of cigarette smoke, and that is the reason why smoke is exhaled when smoking;
- Finally, the smallest bioaerosols are very diffusive, having a high Brownian movement, so that many of them do not transcend beyond the nostrils and mouth.
2.2. Classification of the Droplets Emitted by People
- Larger droplets (greater than 300 μm);
- Transition droplets (size between 100 and 300 μm);
- Bioaerosols (smaller than 100 μm).
2.3. Evaporation
2.4. Dynamic Behaviour of Bioaerosols
2.5. Standard Protocol
- The frequent opening of the windows was established (without specifying time);
- In air conditioning systems, the supply of outside air was maximized (up to 50% of the circulating flow);
- Low occupancy of the classrooms was set;
- A safe distance between people was determined (1.5 m).
- Natural ventilation was relied upon as the primary mechanism for removing indoor polluted air. Problems derived from its random and chaotic nature were not considered. This caused long periods in which a stable ventilation airflow was not achieved (due to the lack of wind pressure, limited indoor/outdoor thermal gradient, absence of cross flow in the room, little stack effect, etc.);
- Thermal discomfort in the classrooms during the cold season was identified, which entailed the reduction of the cognitive abilities of the students and risk to their health;
- In the case of natural ventilation flows, the appearance of annoying drafts was verified. Thus, the indoor air mixing patterns were altered, and, as a consequence, there were large unventilated short-circuit areas.
3. Methods
3.1. Experimental Study in a Typical Classroom
3.2. Filtering Device
4. Results
- Case 1: 100% of the windows open and doors closed. Air conditioning system off;
- Case 2: 50% of the windows open and 50% of the doors open. Air conditioning system off;
- Case 3: 100% of the windows open and 100% of the doors open. Air conditioning system off;
- Case 4: 100% of the windows and doors closed. Constant air filtration flow (400 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system off;
- Case 5: 100% of the windows and doors closed. Constant air filtration flow (330 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system off;
- Case 6: 100% of the windows open and doors closed. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 7: 50% of the windows open and 50% of the doors open. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 8: 100% of the windows open and 100% of the doors open. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 9: 100% of the windows open and doors closed. Constant air filtration flow (550 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 10: 50% of the windows open and 50% of the doors open. Constant air filtration flow (550 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 11: 100% of the windows open and 100% of the doors open. Constant air filtration flow (550 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system on;
- Case 12: 100% of the windows open and doors closed. Constant air filtration flow (550 m3/h) through a HEPA 14 filter. Air conditioning system on.
5. Discussion
5.1. Conclusions Derived from the Results
- The combined action of natural ventilation, the air conditioning system (with 50% of outdoor air) and the filtering device is the strategy that removes particles and aerosols in the shortest time (Case 11);
- Guaranteeing a mixture flow pattern through the air supply of the air conditioning system enables, in all cases, the best performance (Cases 6 to 11);
- If the exterior and interior conditions allow it, natural ventilation achieves very good results (Case 3). However, natural ventilation does not offer reliable particulate removal conditions due to its chaotic and unpredictable nature. The measurements made were taken at a certain moment and cannot be considered as the average of conditions that can be guaranteed. On the other hand, natural ventilation causes an unacceptable interior temperature drop far from comfort conditions;
- In the event that the windows are closed to prevent the entry of outside air without conditioning in winter (taking into account thermal comfort), the simultaneous use of the filtering device and the air conditioning system with outside air supply (Case 12) reaches average values analogous to a natural ventilation regime, with the added guarantee of controlling the stability of the ventilation process;
- The results obtained when the opening surface of the windows and doors is reduced to 50%, in combination with the operation of the air conditioning system (with 50% outdoor air supply) and the filtering device (Case 10), reach similar quality standards to the best case study. The relative advantage is a better quality of the thermal environment with respect to the complete opening.
5.2. Verification of the Ventilation Conditions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Event | Droplets Generated (Per Event) | Velocity (m/s) | Exhaled Air (L) |
---|---|---|---|
Sneezing | 100,000–1,000,000 | 20–50 | 1.2 |
Coughing | 3000–10,000 | 10 | 1.2 |
Talking | 3900/min | 5 | 700 (1 h) |
Breathing | 1200/min | 1 | 800 (1 h) |
Material | Time that SARS-CoV-2 Remains Infectious on Surfaces |
---|---|
Plastic | 72 h–3 days |
Stainless steel | 48 h–2 days |
Paperboard | 4 h |
Copper | 1–3 h |
Case | Concentration Decay Time 10 μm Particles Range between 3250 and 200 μg/mm3 |
---|---|
Case 1 | >45 min |
Case 2 | 29 min |
Case 3 | 17 min |
Case 4 | 24 min |
Case 5 | 33 min |
Case 6 | 19 min |
Case 7 | 18 min |
Case 8 | 15 min |
Case 9 | 10 min |
Case 10 | 8 min |
Case 11 | 6 min |
Case 12 | 18 min |
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Meiss, A.; Poza-Casado, I.; Llorente-Álvarez, A.; Jimeno-Merino, H.; Padilla-Marcos, M.Á. Implementation of a Ventilation Protocol for SARS-CoV-2 in a Higher Educational Centre. Energies 2021, 14, 6172. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14196172
Meiss A, Poza-Casado I, Llorente-Álvarez A, Jimeno-Merino H, Padilla-Marcos MÁ. Implementation of a Ventilation Protocol for SARS-CoV-2 in a Higher Educational Centre. Energies. 2021; 14(19):6172. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14196172
Chicago/Turabian StyleMeiss, Alberto, Irene Poza-Casado, Alfredo Llorente-Álvarez, Héctor Jimeno-Merino, and Miguel Ángel Padilla-Marcos. 2021. "Implementation of a Ventilation Protocol for SARS-CoV-2 in a Higher Educational Centre" Energies 14, no. 19: 6172. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14196172
APA StyleMeiss, A., Poza-Casado, I., Llorente-Álvarez, A., Jimeno-Merino, H., & Padilla-Marcos, M. Á. (2021). Implementation of a Ventilation Protocol for SARS-CoV-2 in a Higher Educational Centre. Energies, 14(19), 6172. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14196172