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Article Dans Une Revue Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Année : 2020

Speech can produce jet-like transport relevant to asymptomatic spreading of virus

Résumé

Many scientific reports document that asymptomatic andpresymptomatic individuals contribute to the spread of COVID-19,probably during conversations in social interactions. Droplet emission occurs during speech, yet few studies document the flow to provide the transport mechanism. This lack of understanding prevents informed public health guidance for risk reduction and mitigation strategies, e.g., the “6-foot rule.” Here we analyze flowsduring breathing and speaking, including phonetic features, usingorders-of-magnitude estimates, numerical simulations, and laboratory experiments. We document the spatiotemporal structure of the expelled airflow. Phonetic characteristics of plosive soundslike “P” lead to enhanced directed transport, including jet-likeflows that entrain the surrounding air. We highlight three distinct temporal scaling laws for the transport distance of exhaled material including 1) transport over a short distance (<0.5 m) ina fraction of a second, with large angular variations due to the complexity of speech; 2) a longer distance,∼1 m, where directed transport is driven by individual vortical puffs corresponding to plosive sounds; and 3) a distance out to about 2 m, or even farther,where sequential plosives in a sentence, corresponding effectivelyto a train of puffs, create conical, jet-like flows. The latter dictates the long-time transport in a conversation. We believe that this work will inform thinking about the role of ventilation, aerosol transport in disease transmission for humans and other animals,and yield a better understanding of linguistic aerodynamics, i.e.,aerophonetics.
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Dates et versions

hal-02967621 , version 1 (20-10-2020)

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Manouk Abkarian, Simon Mendez, Nan Xue, Fan Yang, Howard Stone. Speech can produce jet-like transport relevant to asymptomatic spreading of virus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2020, 117 (41), pp.25237-25245. ⟨10.1073/pnas.2012156117⟩. ⟨hal-02967621⟩
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