COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building

Minimizing all aspects of COVID-19 exposure is a high priority as universities prepare to reopen. One of those aspects includes developing protocols for interior spaces such as academic buildings. This paper applies mathematical modeling to investigate different virus exposure levels due to traffic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Van Romero, William D. Stone, Julie Dyke Ford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-09-01
Series:Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198220300968
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spelling doaj-7a9702a821524d079e08ff342c9e19c22020-11-25T03:35:02ZengElsevierTransportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives2590-19822020-09-017100185COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic buildingVan Romero0William D. Stone1Julie Dyke Ford2Corresponding author.; New Mexico Tech, 801 Leroy Place, Socorro, NM 87801, USANew Mexico Tech, 801 Leroy Place, Socorro, NM 87801, USANew Mexico Tech, 801 Leroy Place, Socorro, NM 87801, USAMinimizing all aspects of COVID-19 exposure is a high priority as universities prepare to reopen. One of those aspects includes developing protocols for interior spaces such as academic buildings. This paper applies mathematical modeling to investigate different virus exposure levels due to traffic patterns within academic buildings. The assumption used are: 1) Risk of infection is a product of exposure rate and time and 2) the exposure rate decreases with distance. One-way vs. two-way pedestrian traffic scenarios within hallways were modeled and analyzed for various configurations. The underlying assumption that a small exposure to a large number of people is similar to a large exposure to a few people is the driver to minimize exposures levels in all aspects. The analysis indicates that minimizing the time spent in passing between classes is the driving factor in minimizing risk, and one-way traffic may increase the time required to pass between classes. While the case presented is limited, the modeled approaches are intended to provoke future research that can be extended and applied to larger populations to help provide decision makers with more rigorous tools to shape future policies regarding traffic flow within buildings.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198220300968COVID-19Building traffic scenariosCorridor trafficTransmission
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Van Romero
William D. Stone
Julie Dyke Ford
spellingShingle Van Romero
William D. Stone
Julie Dyke Ford
COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
COVID-19
Building traffic scenarios
Corridor traffic
Transmission
author_facet Van Romero
William D. Stone
Julie Dyke Ford
author_sort Van Romero
title COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
title_short COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
title_full COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
title_fullStr COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19 indoor exposure levels: An analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
title_sort covid-19 indoor exposure levels: an analysis of foot traffic scenarios within an academic building
publisher Elsevier
series Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives
issn 2590-1982
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Minimizing all aspects of COVID-19 exposure is a high priority as universities prepare to reopen. One of those aspects includes developing protocols for interior spaces such as academic buildings. This paper applies mathematical modeling to investigate different virus exposure levels due to traffic patterns within academic buildings. The assumption used are: 1) Risk of infection is a product of exposure rate and time and 2) the exposure rate decreases with distance. One-way vs. two-way pedestrian traffic scenarios within hallways were modeled and analyzed for various configurations. The underlying assumption that a small exposure to a large number of people is similar to a large exposure to a few people is the driver to minimize exposures levels in all aspects. The analysis indicates that minimizing the time spent in passing between classes is the driving factor in minimizing risk, and one-way traffic may increase the time required to pass between classes. While the case presented is limited, the modeled approaches are intended to provoke future research that can be extended and applied to larger populations to help provide decision makers with more rigorous tools to shape future policies regarding traffic flow within buildings.
topic COVID-19
Building traffic scenarios
Corridor traffic
Transmission
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590198220300968
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AT williamdstone covid19indoorexposurelevelsananalysisoffoottrafficscenarioswithinanacademicbuilding
AT juliedykeford covid19indoorexposurelevelsananalysisoffoottrafficscenarioswithinanacademicbuilding
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