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Inactivation of airborne microbial contaminants by a heat-pump-driven liquid-desiccant air-conditioning system

Authors
Lee, Jae-HeeBang, Jong-IlSung, MinkiJeong, Jae-Weon
Issue Date
Jun-2022
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Keywords
Airborne bacteria; Airborne fungi; Inactivation effect; Liquid-desiccant air-conditioning system
Citation
Journal of Building Engineering, v.50, pp.1 - 14
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Building Engineering
Volume
50
Start Page
1
End Page
14
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/170161
DOI
10.1016/j.jobe.2022.104157
ISSN
2352-7102
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to increasing interest in controlling airborne virus transmission during the operation of air-conditioning systems. Therefore, beyond an examination of the ability of liquid-desiccant material itself to inactivate microbes, a heat-pump-driven liquid-desiccant air-conditioning system was proposed and constructed to experimentally investigate the effect of liquid-desiccant solution on the inactivation of airborne bacteria and fungi in various air-conditioning processes. The proposed system comprises a liquid-desiccant unit to dehumidify or humidify process air using a desiccant-solution and heat-pump unit to cool or heat it and accommodate solution thermal loads. The decrease in the concentration of airborne bacteria and fungi before and after passing through the system (i.e., inactivation efficiency) were compared for the base, summer, and winter operating modes. The results indicated that airborne fungi were less inactivated than bacteria because they possess more stress-resistant cellular structures that resist inactivation. During the air-conditioning processes in both the summer and winter operating modes, the bacterial and fungal inactivation efficiencies improved compared to the base mode owing to the contact with desiccant solution. The higher solution flow rate and solution temperature improved the bacterial inactivation efficiency by 27% for the winter compared to the summer mode. Conversely, because of possible growth of fungi in the heated and humidified supply air in the winter, the fungal inactivation efficiency improved by only 1.5% for the winter compared to the summer mode. In conclusion, the proposed system can contribute to control the airborne transmission of microbial contaminants while operating air-conditioning systems.
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