4.8 Article

On secondary atomization and blockage of surrogate cough droplets in single- and multilayer face masks

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abf0452

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Funding

  1. DRDO Chair Professorship
  2. UTIAS
  3. Jacobs School of Engineering at UCSD

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Face masks can prevent the transmission of infectious respiratory diseases by blocking large droplets and aerosols. Single or double-layer masks may not effectively block the penetration of large droplets, leading to their atomization into smaller droplets that can remain airborne. Therefore, three-layer masks may be more effective in preventing the spread of these droplets.
Face masks prevent transmission of infectious respiratory diseases by blocking large droplets and aerosols during exhalation or inhalation. While three-layer masks are generally advised, many commonly available or makeshift masks contain single or double layers. Using carefully designed experiments involving high-speed imaging along with physics-based analysis, we show that high-momentum, large-sized (>250 micrometer) surrogate cough droplets can penetrate single- or double-layer mask material to a significant extent. The penetrated droplets can atomize into numerous much smaller (<100 micrometer) droplets, which could remain airborne for a significant time. The possibility of secondary atomization of high-momentum cough droplets by hydrodynamic focusing and extrusion through the microscale pores in the fibrous network of the single/double-layer mask material needs to be considered in determining mask efficacy. Three-layer masks can effectively block these droplets and thus could be ubiquitously used as a key tool against COVID-19 or similar respiratory diseases.

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