| Literature DB >> 32764709 |
Katherine Schilling1, Drew R Gentner1,2, Lawrence Wilen3, Antonio Medina3, Colby Buehler1,2, Luis J Perez-Lorenzo4, Krystal J Godri Pollitt1,5, Reza Bergemann3, Nick Bernardo3, Jordan Peccia1, Vincent Wilczynski3, Lisa Lattanza6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has presented an acute shortage of regulation-tested masks. Many of the alternatives available to hospitals have not been certified, leaving uncertainty about their ability to properly protect healthcare workers from SARS-CoV-2 transmission.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Masks; N95 respirators; Personal protective equipment (PPE); SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32764709 PMCID: PMC7406964 DOI: 10.1038/s41370-020-0258-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol ISSN: 1559-0631 Impact factor: 6.371
Fig. 1Primary experimental setup for aerosol filtration assessmen.
“Aerosol detectors” refer to SEARCH monitors and the “aerosol particle counter” is the AirNet instrument (in orange).
Fig. 2Experimental setup to test flow impedance test for breathability.
Based on ref. [32].
Fig. 3A rapid screening setup.
a Schematic and b example test procedure.
Fig. 4Filtration efficiency of 47 commercially available masks.
a Filtration efficiency for all aerosols of 0.2 μm and larger, shown with a regulation-tested N95 mask (blue marker) at a face velocity of 10 cm/s, roughly simulating an 105 LPM inspiratory breathing rate; and b mask performance shown for three aerosol size fractions from 0.2 to 1 μm. Efficiencies shown are determined via aerosol number concentrations and the a inset shows variations across masks tested for four mask types, displayed as the absolute deviation in aerosol filtration efficiency from the average (i.e., Eff.Sample − Eff.Avg.). Mask numbers in the inset (and Fig. 5) refer to cataloging in Table S1 and not rank-ordered performance.
Fig. 5Filtration efficiency as a function of face velocity resulting from typical breathing flow rates.
a Aerosol removal efficiency (>0.2 μm) of three masks: an N95 regulation mask and two masks marketed as KN95 (#1 and #15). b Size-resolved removal efficiency for a moderately performing mask (#15 from a).
Fig. 6Measured impedance values shown against breathability index (i.e., N95 intrinsic impedance/intrinsic impedance) where all masks are within the NIOSH threshold for impedance.
Points are colored based on filtration efficiency, and no correlation was observed between impedance and filtration efficiency (see Fig. S7a).
Fig. 7Comparison of rapid screening setup (Fig. 3) compared with primary setup (Fig. 1) showing equivalent ranking of mask/respirator performance. Filtration efficiencies are shown for 0.2–0.3 μm aerosols. Tested face velocities were not the same between the two approaches.