Modeling Clothing as a Vector for Transporting Airborne Particles and Pathogens across Indoor Microenvironments
Jacob Kvasnicka, Elaine A. Cohen Hubal, Jeffrey A. Siegel, James A. Scott, Miriam L. Diamond
Abstract
). This value was 61% (5-95%: 17-300%) of the occupant's primary inhalation exposure in the workplace while unmasked. By arrival at the occupant's home after a car commute, relatively rapid viral inactivation on cotton clothing had reduced the infectious volume on clothing by 80% (5-95%: 26-99%). Secondary inhalation exposure (after work) was low in the absence of close proximity and physical contact with contaminated clothing. In comparison, the average primary inhalation exposure in the workplace was higher by about 2-3 orders of magnitude. It remains theoretically possible that resuspension and physical contact with contaminated clothing can occasionally transmit SARS-CoV-2 between humans.