The novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) spread pattern continues to show that
geographical barriers alone cannot contain a virus. Asymptomatic carriers play a critical
role in the nature of this virus quickly escalating into a global pandemic. Asymptomatic
carriers may transmit the virus unintentionally through sporadic sneezing. A novel
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) approach has been proposed with a realistic modeling of
a human sneeze achieved by the combination of state-of-the-art experimental and numerical
methods. This modeling approach may be suitable for future engineering analyses aimed at
reshaping public spaces and common areas, with the main objective to accurately predict
the spread of aerosol and droplets that may contain pathogens. This study shows that the
biomechanics of a human sneeze, including complex muscle contractions and relaxations, can
be accurately modeled by the angular head motion and the dynamic pressure response during
sneezing. These have been considered as the human factors and were implemented in the CFD
simulation by imposing a momentum source term to the coupled Eulerian–Lagrangian momentum
equations. The momentum source was modeled by the measured dynamic pressure response in
conjunction with the angular head motion. This approach eliminated the need to create an
ad hoc
set of inlet boundary conditions. With this proposed technique,
it is easier to add multiple fixed and/or moving sources of sneezes in complex
computational domains. Additionally, extensive sensitivity analyses based on different
environmental conditions were performed, and their impact was described in terms of
potential virus spread.
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