Quantifying the effect of a mask on expiratory flows
ORAL
Abstract
Face masks are used widely to mitigate the spread of infectious diseases. While their main purpose is to filter pathogenic droplets, masks also represent a porous barrier to exhaled and inhaled air flow. In this study, we characterize the aerodynamic effect of the presence of a mask by tracking the air exhaled by a person through a mask, using both infrared imaging and particle image velocimetry performed on illuminated fog droplets surrounding a subject. We show how a mask confines the exhaled flows within tens of centimeters in front of a person breathing or speaking. In addition, we show that the tissue of common surgical face masks has a low permeability, which efficiently transforms the jetlike flows of exhalation produced during breathing or speaking into quasivertical buoyancy-driven flows. Therefore, wearing a mask offers a strong mitigation of direct transport of infectious material in addition to providing a filtering function. By comparing results on human subjects and model experiments, we propose a model to rationalize how a mask changes the air flow, and thus we provide quantitative insights that are useful for descriptions of disease transmission.
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Publication: P. Bourrianne, N. Xue, J. Nunes, M. Abkarian and H. A. Stone, Quantifying the effect of a mask on expiratory flows, Phys. Rev. Fluids (accepted).
Presenters
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Philippe Bourrianne
Princeton University
Authors
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Philippe Bourrianne
Princeton University
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Nan Xue
Princeton University
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Janine Nunes
Princeton University
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Manouk Abkarian
Centre de Biochimie Structurale, CNRS UMR 5048-INSERM UMR 1054, University of Montpellier, 34090 Montpellier, France, CNRS, Université de Montpellier
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Howard A Stone
Princeton, Princeton University