Abstract

Present day risk assessment on the spreading of airborne viruses is often based on the classical Wells-Riley model assuming immediate mixing of the aerosol into the studied environment. Here, we improve on this approach and the underlying assumptions by modeling the space-time dependency of the aerosol concentration via a transport equation with a dynamic source term introduced by the infected individual(s). In the present agent-based methodology, we study the viral aerosol inhalation exposure risk in two scenarios including a low/high risk scenario of a “supermarket”/“bar”. The model takes into account typical behavioral patterns for determining the rules of motion for the agents. We solve a diffusion model for aerosol concentration in the prescribed environments in order to account for local exposure to aerosol inhalation. We assess the infection risk using the Wells-Riley model formula using a space-time dependent aerosol concentration. The results are compared against the classical Wells-Riley model. The results indicate features that explain individual cases of high risk with repeated sampling of a heterogeneous environment occupied by non-equilibrium concentration clouds. An example is the relative frequency of cases that might be called superspreading events depending on the model parameters. A simple interpretation is that averages of infection risk are often misleading. They also point out and explain the qualitative and quantitative difference between the two cases—shopping is typically safer for a single individual person.

Highlights

  • According to a recent study, the emerging new SARS-CoV-2 variants are extremely infectious with the basic reproduction number Ro * 6 − 8

  • Fourth, our simulation model and the results show that a combined approach involving physical detail and a consistent Monte Carlo modelling of a large cohort of individuals allows to obtain quantitatively relevant results

  • Our goal has been to highlight the strength of agent-based simulations in grasping semi-quantitatively the risk levels of COVID-19 exposure in two typical settings

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Summary

Introduction

According to a recent study, the emerging new SARS-CoV-2 variants are extremely infectious with the basic reproduction number Ro * 6 − 8.

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