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Title:
Theoretical Modeling Approaches to Investigating the Spread of Disease in Airports and on Aircraft: Advance Models for Predicting Contaminants and Infectious Disease Virus Transport in
the Airliner Cabin Environment (Part 1)
Accession Number:
01174172
Availability:
Transportation Research Board Business Office
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States
Abstract:
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) is a very attractive tool to study the transmission of airborne contaminants in an airliner cabin as it is inexpensive and flexible in changing thermofluid conditions inside the cabins compared with experimental measurements. The results presented here illustrate the potential of using CFD in modeling gaseous and particulate contaminant transport inside airliner cabins. CFD was also used to model the SARS transmission case in Air China Flight 112 from Hong Kong to Beijing in 2003 where a contagious passenger infected some 20 fellow passengers. Some seated as far as seven rows from the contagious passenger were infected. The movement of passengers and crew members may play a role in transmission.
Monograph Accession #:
01174169
Authors:
Chen, Qingyan
Mazumdar, Sagnik
Plesniak, Michael W
Poussou, Stephane
Sojka, Paul E
Zhang, Tengfei
Zhang, Zhao
Features:
Figures
(9)
; Photos
(1)
Subject Areas:
Aviation; Safety and Human Factors
Created Date:
Sep 29 2010 10:30AM
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