Litcius/Paper detail

On pollen and airborne virus transmission

Talib Dbouk, Dimitris Drikakis

2021Physics of Fluids24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study investigates how airborne pollen pellets (or grains) can cause severe respiratory-related problems in humans. Given that pollen pellets can capture ribonucleic acid viruses, we show that airborne pollen grains could transport airborne virus particles such as the airborne coronavirus (CoV) disease (COVID-19) or others. We consider the environmental conditions featuring the highest pollen concentration season and conduct computational multiphysics, multiscale modeling and simulations. The investigation concerns a prototype problem comprising the transport of 104 airborne pollen grains dropped from a mature willow tree at a wind speed of (Uwind=4 km/h). We show how pollen grains can increase the coronavirus (CoV) transmission rate in a group of people, including some infected persons. In the case of high pollen grains concentrations in the air or during pollination in the spring, the social distance of 2 m does not hold as a health safety measure for an outdoor crowd. Thus, the public authorities should revise the social distancing guidelines.

Topics & Concepts

PollenAirborne transmissionTransmission (telecommunications)PhysicsMeteorologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Atmospheric sciencesBiologyBotanyMedicineDiseaseComputer scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyTelecommunicationsCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesAllergic Rhinitis and SensitizationEcosystem dynamics and resilience