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How coronavirus survives for days on surfaces

Rajneesh Bhardwaj, Amit Agrawal

2020Physics of Fluids55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, 061704 (2020)] showed that the drying time of typical respiratory droplets is on the order of seconds, while the survival time of the coronavirus on different surfaces was reported to be on the order of hours in recent experiments. We attribute the long survival time of the coronavirus on a surface to the slow evaporation of a thin nanometer liquid film remaining after the evaporation of the bulk droplet. Accordingly, we employ a computational model for a thin film in which the evaporating mass rate is a function of disjoining and Laplace pressures inside the film. The model shows a strong dependence on the initial thickness of the film and suggests that the drying time of this nanometric film is on the order of hours, consistent with the survival time of the coronavirus on a surface, seen in published experiments. We briefly examine the change in the drying time as a function of the contact angle and type of surface. The computed time-varying film thickness or volume qualitatively agrees with the measured decay of the coronavirus titer on different surfaces. The present work provides insights on why coronavirus survival is on the order of hours or days on a solid surface under ambient conditions.

Topics & Concepts

EvaporationPhysicsCoronavirusMechanicsDisjoining pressureVolume (thermodynamics)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)NanotechnologyMaterials scienceThermodynamicsWettingMedicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyDiseaseInfection Control and VentilationNanomaterials and Printing Technologies
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