Outdoor Airborne Transmission of Coronavirus Among Apartments in High-Density Cities

被引:26
|
作者
Huang, Jianxiang [1 ]
Jones, Phil [2 ]
Zhang, Anqi [1 ]
Hou, Shan Shan [2 ]
Hang, Jian [3 ]
Spengler, John D. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Urban Planning & Design, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Cardiff Univ, Welsh Sch Architecture, King Edward VII Ave, Cardiff, Wales
[3] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Atmospher Sci, Minist Educ, Key Lab Trop Atmosphere Ocean Syst, Zhuhai, Peoples R China
[4] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm Hlth, Boston, MA USA
关键词
Coronavirus; airborne transmission; outdoor route; numerical simulation; high-density city; MODEL; SARS; VALIDATION; VENTILATION; POLLUTION; DYNAMICS; COVID-19;
D O I
10.3389/fbuil.2021.666923
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
The coronaviruses have inflicted health and societal crises in recent decades. Both SARS CoV-1 and 2 are suspected to spread through outdoor routes in high-density cities, infecting residents in apartments on separate floors or in different buildings in many superspreading events, often in the absence of close personal contact. The viability of such mode of transmission is disputed in the research literature, and there is little evidence on the dose-response relationship at the apartment level. This paper describes a study to examine the viability of outdoor airborne transmission between neighboring apartments in high density cities. A first-principles model, airborne transmission via outdoor route (ATOR), was developed to simulate airborne pathogen generation, natural decay, outdoor dispersion, apartment entry, and inhalation exposure of susceptible persons in neighboring apartments. The model was partially evaluated using a smoke tracer experiment in a mock-up high-density city site and cross-checking using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models. The ATOR model was used to retrospectively investigate the relationship between viral exposure and disease infection at an apartment level in two superspreading events in Hong Kong: the SARS outbreak in Amoy Gardens and the COVID-19 outbreak in Luk Chuen House. Logistic regression results suggested that the predicted viral exposure was positively correlated with the probability of disease infection at apartment level for both events. Infection risks associated with the outdoor route transmission of SARS can be reduced to <10%, if the quanta emission rate from the primary patient is below 30 q/h. Compared with the indoor route transmission, the outdoor route can better explain patterns of disease infection. A viral plume can spread upward and downward, driven by buoyancy forces, while also dispersing under natural wind. Fan-assistant natural ventilation in residential buildings may increase infection risks. Findings have implication for public health response to current and future pandemics and the ATOR model can serve as planning and design tool to identify the risk of airborne disease transmission in high-density cities.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] DESIGNING HIGH-DENSITY CITIES FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
    Huerol, Yonca
    OPEN HOUSE INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 35 (04) : 86 - 87
  • [2] Rethinking residential building design in high-density cities for enhancing pandemic resilience: Balancing importance and practicality
    Zhou, Shijie
    Tian, Meng
    Xu, Xuesong
    Yuan, Lei
    ENERGY AND BUILDINGS, 2024, 325
  • [3] Implications for sustainable land use in high-density cities: Evidence from Hong Kong
    Wang, Hao
    Zhang, Xiaoling
    Skitmore, Martin
    HABITAT INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 50 : 23 - 34
  • [4] Relationship between pedestrian-level outdoor thermal comfort and building morphology in a high-density city
    Wai, Ka-Ming
    Yuan, Chao
    Lai, Alan
    Yu, Peter K. N.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 708 (708)
  • [5] A dialectical system framework for green building assessment in high-density cities
    Pan, Wei
    Yu, Cong
    Du, Jia
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2022, 97
  • [6] Floor area density and land uses for efficient district cooling systems in high-density cities
    Shi, Zhongming
    Fonseca, Jimeno A.
    Schlueter, Arno
    SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2021, 65
  • [7] Urban performance based on biometeorology index in high-density, hot, and humid cities
    Paramita, Beta
    Kusuma, Hanson Endra
    Matzarakis, Andreas
    SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2022, 80
  • [8] Research on Full-Age Public Space Design in High-Density Cities
    Ye X.
    Peng M.
    Yu K.
    Applied Mathematics and Nonlinear Sciences, 2024, 9 (01)
  • [9] Transmission Dynamics of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 in High-Density Settings, Minnesota, USA, March-June 2020
    Lehnertz, Nicholas B.
    Wang, Xiong
    Garfin, Jacob
    Taylor, Joanne
    Zipprich, Jennifer
    VonBank, Brittany
    Martin, Karen
    Eikmeier, Dana
    Medus, Carlota
    Wiedinmyer, Brooke
    Bernu, Carmen
    Plumb, Matthew
    Pung, Kelly
    Honein, Margaret A.
    Carter, Rosalind
    MacCannell, Duncan
    Smith, Kirk E.
    Como-Sabetti, Kathryn
    Ehresmann, Kris
    Danila, Richard
    Lynfield, Ruth
    EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2021, 27 (08) : 2052 - 2063
  • [10] Theoretical framework and application of urban rainstorm flood control in high-density cities
    Chen W.
    Xu Z.
    Zhang Y.
    Song L.
    Yang F.
    Shuili Xuebao/Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, 2022, 53 (07): : 769 - 778