Textile Masks and Surface Covers—A Spray Simulation Method and a “Universal Droplet Reduction Model” Against Respiratory Pandemics

Título

Textile Masks and Surface Covers—A Spray Simulation Method and a “Universal Droplet Reduction Model” Against Respiratory Pandemics

Autor

Theresa T. Pizarro, Fabio Cominelli, Sanja Ilic, Alex Rodriguez-Palacios, Abigail R. Basson

Descripción

The main form of COVID-19 transmission is via “oral-respiratory droplet contamination” (droplet: very small drop of liquid) produced when individuals talk, sneeze, or cough. In hospitals, health-care workers wear facemasks as a minimum medical “droplet precaution” to protect themselves. Due to the shortage of masks during the pandemic, priority is given to hospitals for their distribution. As a result, the availability/use of medical masks is discouraged for the public. However, for asymptomatic individuals, not wearing masks in public could easily cause the spread of COVID-19. The prevention of “environmental droplet contamination” (EnvDC) from coughing/sneezing/speech is fundamental to reducing transmission. As an immediate solution to promote “public droplet safety,” we assessed household textiles to quantify their potential as effective environmental droplet barriers (EDBs). The synchronized implementation of a universal “community droplet reduction solution” is discussed as a model against COVID-19. Using a bacterial-suspension spray simulation model of droplet ejection (mimicking a sneeze), we quantified the extent by which widely available clothing fabrics reduce the dispersion of droplets onto surfaces within 1.8 m, the minimum distance recommended for COVID-19 “social distancing.” All textiles reduced the number of droplets reaching surfaces, restricting their dispersion to <30 cm, when used as single layers. When used as double-layers, textiles were as effective as medical mask/surgical-cloth materials, reducing droplet dispersion to <10 cm, and the area of circumferential contamination to ~0.3%. The synchronized implementation of EDBs as a “community droplet reduction solution” (i.e., face covers/scarfs/masks and surface covers) will reduce COVID-19 EnvDC and thus the risk of transmitting/acquiring COVID-19.

Fecha

2020

Materia

coronavirus, Textiles, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, respiratory pandemic, cloth masks

Identificador

DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2020.00260

Fuente

Frontiers in Medicine

Editor

Frontiers Media S.A.

Cobertura

Medicine (General)

Archivos

https://socictopen.socict.org/files/to_import/pdfs/5012649.pdf

Colección

Citación

Theresa T. Pizarro, Fabio Cominelli, Sanja Ilic, Alex Rodriguez-Palacios, Abigail R. Basson, “Textile Masks and Surface Covers—A Spray Simulation Method and a “Universal Droplet Reduction Model” Against Respiratory Pandemics,” SOCICT Open, consulta 18 de abril de 2026, https://socictopen.socict.org/items/show/3449.

Formatos de Salida

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