Variations in human saliva viscoelasticity affect aerosolization propensity

Rodríguez-Hakim, Mariana, Räz, Linard y Vermant, Jan . (2022) Variations in human saliva viscoelasticity affect aerosolization propensity. Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 2528-2540

Ficheros (Some files may be inaccessible until you login with your e-spacio credentials)
Nombre Descripción Tipo MIME Size
RODRIGUEZ_HAKIM_Mariana_VariationsInHumanSali.pdf RODRIGUEZ_HAKIM_Mariana_VariationsInHumanSali.pdf application/pdf 5.30MB

Título Variations in human saliva viscoelasticity affect aerosolization propensity
Autor(es) Rodríguez-Hakim, Mariana
Räz, Linard
Vermant, Jan
Materia(s) Física
Abstract Some contagious diseases, such as COVID-19, spread through the transmission of aerosols and droplets. Aerosol and droplet formation occurs inside and outside of the respiratory tract, the latter being observed during speaking and sneezing. Upon sneezing, saliva is expelled as a flat sheet, which destabilizes into filaments that subsequently break up into droplets. The presence of macromolecules (such as mucins) in saliva influences the dynamics of aerosol generation, since elasticity is expected to stabilize both fluid sheets and filaments, hence deterring droplet formation. In this study, the process of aerosol formation outside the respiratory tract is systematically replicated using an impinging jet setup, where two liquid jets collide and form a thin fluid sheet that can fragment into ligaments and droplets. The experimental setup enables us to investigate a range of dynamic conditions, quantified by the relevant non-dimensional numbers, which encompass those experienced during sneezing. Experiments are conducted with human saliva provided by different donors, revealing significant variations in their stability and breakup. We quantify the effect of viscoelasticity via shear and extensional rheology experiments, concluding that the extensional relaxation time is the most adequate measure of a saliva's elasticity. We summarize our results in terms of the dimensionless Weber, Reynolds, and Deborah numbers and construct universal state diagrams that directly compare our data to human sneezing, concluding that the aerosolization propensity is correlated with diminished saliva elasticities, higher emission velocities, and larger ejecta volumes. This could entail variations in disease transmission between individuals which hitherto have not been recognized.
Editor(es) Royal Society of Chemistry
Fecha 2022-01-26
Identificador bibliuned:DptoFF-FCIE-Articulos-Mrodriguez-0005
http://e-spacio.uned.es/fez/view/bibliuned:DptoFF-FCIE-Articulos-Mrodriguez-0005
DOI - identifier https://doi.org/10.1039/D1SM01581H
ISSN - identifier 1744-683X; eISSN: 1744-6848
Nombre de la revista Soft Matter
Número de Issue 18
Página inicial 2528
Página final 2540
Publicado en la Revista Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 2528-2540
Idioma eng
Versión de la publicación publishedVersion
Tipo de recurso Article
Derechos de acceso y licencia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Tipo de acceso Acceso abierto
Notas adicionales The registered version of this article, first published in Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 2528-2540, is available online at the publisher's website: Royal Society of Chemistry, https://doi.org/10.1039/D1SM01581H
Notas adicionales La versión registrada de este artículo, publicado por primera vez en Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 2528-2540, está disponible en línea en el sitio web del editor: Royal Society of Chemistry, https://doi.org/10.1039/D1SM01581H

Tipo de documento: Artículo de revista
Collections: Departamento de Física Fundamental (UNED). Artículos
Set de artículo
Set de openaire
 
Versiones
Versión Tipo de filtro
Contador de citas: Google Scholar Search Google Scholar
Estadísticas de acceso: 32 Visitas, 8 Descargas  -  Estadísticas en detalle
Creado: Mon, 05 Feb 2024, 21:55:05 CET