| Literature DB >> 32877201 |
Jie Li1, Stephan Ehrmann2,3.
Abstract
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32877201 PMCID: PMC7560802 DOI: 10.1164/rccm.202008-3317ED
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med ISSN: 1073-449X Impact factor: 21.405
Comparison of Different Methods Used to Investigate Aerosol Generation and Dispersion
| Imaging | Aerosol Particle Concentrations | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smoke Light Detection ( | Schlieren Imaging ( | Laser Light Scattering ( | ||
| Description | Smoke particles (0.1–2.5 μm) are mixed in exhaled gas to highlight the exhaled flow. The exhalation plume is then illuminated by a laser light sheet to enable measurements | Use of a
| A green laser is transformed into a light sheet, and a camera is used to record the light-scattering events when droplets encounter the light sheet. The size of the droplets is estimated from ultra-high-resolution recordings | Use of an aerosol particle sizer to measure the concentrations of aerosol particles of different sizes (0.3–20 μm) in ambient air |
| Advantage | Visualizes the gas or aerosol movement during breathing
and quantifies the distance of exhaled gas or aerosol | Quantifies the concentrations of aerosol particle ranges in the room air at a specific sampling distance from the patient | ||
| Disadvantage | Smoke only represents a small
part of aerosol particle range (2.5 μm). Does not reflect the
movement of large bioaerosol particles generated during coughing and
sneezing. | Does not quantify the concentrations and sizes of the exhaled particles | The size of the droplets is estimated; it mainly counts large droplets, and thus it is limited for small particle quantification | Does not show the movement of aerosol particles, requires sufficient time to clear aerosol particles between interventions, and is very sensitive to background noise |
| No measurement of the virus load contained in the aerosol nor its infectious potential | ||||