Abstract

The goal of this study was to design, test, and model cylindrical flow-through control devices used to inactivate airborne microorganisms with non-mercury radiation sources and a reflective coating, through a broad relative humidity (RH) range. Bench-scale tests determined the effectiveness of three different UV-C sources–light emitting diode (LED), xenon, and mercury. In addition to measurements, modeling was performed that combined photon tracing, computational fluid dynamics, and particle tracking to predict the effectiveness of the respective UV challenges. Regardless of device configuration, UV-induced inactivation of airborne Bacillus subtilis and Mycobacterium parafortuitum was markedly sensitive to low humidity (15 % RH). Actinometry measurements determined that a high reflectance wall coating increased the fluence rate by a factor of 1.6. Predictions of inactivation effectiveness using this hybrid model were in good agreement with experimental observations with errors of less than 15 %.

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