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Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission

The exhalation of aerosols during musical performances or rehearsals posed a risk of airborne virus transmission in the COVID‐19 pandemic. Previous research studied aerosol plumes by only focusing on one risk factor, either the source strength or convective transport capability. Furthermore, the sou...

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Autores principales: Wang, Lingzhe, Lin, Tong, Da Costa, Hevander, Zhu, Shengwei, Stockman, Tehya, Kumar, Abhishek, Weaver, James, Spede, Mark, Milton, Donald K., Hertzberg, Jean, Toohey, Darin W., Vance, Marina E., Miller, Shelly L., Srebric, Jelena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9328346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35762243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ina.13064
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author Wang, Lingzhe
Lin, Tong
Da Costa, Hevander
Zhu, Shengwei
Stockman, Tehya
Kumar, Abhishek
Weaver, James
Spede, Mark
Milton, Donald K.
Hertzberg, Jean
Toohey, Darin W.
Vance, Marina E.
Miller, Shelly L.
Srebric, Jelena
author_facet Wang, Lingzhe
Lin, Tong
Da Costa, Hevander
Zhu, Shengwei
Stockman, Tehya
Kumar, Abhishek
Weaver, James
Spede, Mark
Milton, Donald K.
Hertzberg, Jean
Toohey, Darin W.
Vance, Marina E.
Miller, Shelly L.
Srebric, Jelena
author_sort Wang, Lingzhe
collection PubMed
description The exhalation of aerosols during musical performances or rehearsals posed a risk of airborne virus transmission in the COVID‐19 pandemic. Previous research studied aerosol plumes by only focusing on one risk factor, either the source strength or convective transport capability. Furthermore, the source strength was characterized by the aerosol concentration and ignored the airflow rate needed for risk analysis in actual musical performances. This study characterizes aerosol plumes that account for both the source strength and convective transport capability by conducting experiments with 18 human subjects. The source strength was characterized by the source aerosol emission rate, defined as the source aerosol concentration multiplied by the source airflow rate (brass 383 particle/s, singing 408 particle/s, and woodwind 480 particle/s). The convective transport capability was characterized by the plume influence distance, defined as the sum of the horizontal jet length and horizontal instrument length (brass 0.6 m, singing 0.6 m and woodwind 0.8 m). Results indicate that woodwind instruments produced the highest risk with approximately 20% higher source aerosol emission rates and 30% higher plume influence distances compared with the average of the same risk indicators for singing and brass instruments. Interestingly, the clarinet performance produced moderate source aerosol concentrations at the instrument’s bell, but had the highest source aerosol emission rates due to high source airflow rates. Flute performance generated plumes with the lowest source aerosol emission rates but the highest plume influence distances due to the highest source airflow rate. Notably, these comprehensive results show that the source airflow is a critical component of the risk of airborne disease transmission. The effectiveness of masking and bell covering in reducing aerosol transmission is due to the mitigation of both source aerosol concentrations and plume influence distances. This study also found a musician who generated approximately five times more source aerosol concentrations than those of the other musicians who played the same instrument. Despite voice and brass instruments producing measurably lower average risk, it is possible to have an individual musician produce aerosol plumes with high source strength, resulting in enhanced transmission risk; however, our sample size was too small to make generalizable conclusions regarding the broad musician population.
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spelling pubmed-93283462022-07-30 Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission Wang, Lingzhe Lin, Tong Da Costa, Hevander Zhu, Shengwei Stockman, Tehya Kumar, Abhishek Weaver, James Spede, Mark Milton, Donald K. Hertzberg, Jean Toohey, Darin W. Vance, Marina E. Miller, Shelly L. Srebric, Jelena Indoor Air Original Articles The exhalation of aerosols during musical performances or rehearsals posed a risk of airborne virus transmission in the COVID‐19 pandemic. Previous research studied aerosol plumes by only focusing on one risk factor, either the source strength or convective transport capability. Furthermore, the source strength was characterized by the aerosol concentration and ignored the airflow rate needed for risk analysis in actual musical performances. This study characterizes aerosol plumes that account for both the source strength and convective transport capability by conducting experiments with 18 human subjects. The source strength was characterized by the source aerosol emission rate, defined as the source aerosol concentration multiplied by the source airflow rate (brass 383 particle/s, singing 408 particle/s, and woodwind 480 particle/s). The convective transport capability was characterized by the plume influence distance, defined as the sum of the horizontal jet length and horizontal instrument length (brass 0.6 m, singing 0.6 m and woodwind 0.8 m). Results indicate that woodwind instruments produced the highest risk with approximately 20% higher source aerosol emission rates and 30% higher plume influence distances compared with the average of the same risk indicators for singing and brass instruments. Interestingly, the clarinet performance produced moderate source aerosol concentrations at the instrument’s bell, but had the highest source aerosol emission rates due to high source airflow rates. Flute performance generated plumes with the lowest source aerosol emission rates but the highest plume influence distances due to the highest source airflow rate. Notably, these comprehensive results show that the source airflow is a critical component of the risk of airborne disease transmission. The effectiveness of masking and bell covering in reducing aerosol transmission is due to the mitigation of both source aerosol concentrations and plume influence distances. This study also found a musician who generated approximately five times more source aerosol concentrations than those of the other musicians who played the same instrument. Despite voice and brass instruments producing measurably lower average risk, it is possible to have an individual musician produce aerosol plumes with high source strength, resulting in enhanced transmission risk; however, our sample size was too small to make generalizable conclusions regarding the broad musician population. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-06-13 2022-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9328346/ /pubmed/35762243 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ina.13064 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Indoor Air published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Wang, Lingzhe
Lin, Tong
Da Costa, Hevander
Zhu, Shengwei
Stockman, Tehya
Kumar, Abhishek
Weaver, James
Spede, Mark
Milton, Donald K.
Hertzberg, Jean
Toohey, Darin W.
Vance, Marina E.
Miller, Shelly L.
Srebric, Jelena
Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title_full Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title_fullStr Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title_short Characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
title_sort characterization of aerosol plumes from singing and playing wind instruments associated with the risk of airborne virus transmission
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9328346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35762243
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ina.13064
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