Journal of Building Engineering | 2021

Study on ventilation rates and assessment of infection risks of COVID-19 in an outpatient building

 
 

Abstract


\n A modified Wells-Riley model combining the airborne route and close contact route was proposed to predict the infection risks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in main functional spaces of an outpatient building in Shenzhen, China. The personnel densities and ventilation rates in the 20 waiting rooms, outpatient hall and hospital street were on-site measured. The average fresh air volume per person and occupant area per person in the 20 waiting rooms were 77.6\u202fm3/h and 6.47\u202fm2/per, satisfied with the Chinese standard. The average waiting time of the occupants was 0.69\u202fh. Thus, assuming the proportion of infected people in the outpatient building was 2%, the daily average infection probabilities of COVID-19 in the 20 waiting rooms were 0.19–1.88% with a reasonable setting of the quanta produced by an infector (q\u202f=\u202f45 quanta/h) and the effective exposure dose of pathogen per unit close contact time (β\u202f=\u202f0.05 h−1). The design of the semi-closed hospital street with a height of 24\u202fm improved its natural ventilation with a fresh air volume per person of 70–185\u202fm3/h and further dilute the viral aerosol and decreased the infection risk to a negligible level (i.e., below 0.04% with an infector proportion of 2%). The assessment method provides real-time prediction of indoor infection risk and good assist in spread control of COVID-19.\n

Volume 42
Pages 103090 - 103090
DOI 10.1016/j.jobe.2021.103090
Language English
Journal Journal of Building Engineering

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