Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Haghighat F" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 From pollution barriers to health buffers: Rethinking building airtightness under climate variability Fu N; Zhang R; Haghighat F; Kumar P; Cao SJ; 41252997
ENCS
2 A practical approach for preventing dispersion of infection disease in naturally ventilated room Ren C; Cao SJ; Haghighat F; 40477856
ENCS
3 Ce-doped MnOx mixed with polyvinylidene fluoride as an amplified ozone decomposition filter medium in humid conditions Namdari M; Haghighat F; Lee CS; 39579188
ENCS
4 Assessing greenhouse gas emissions in Cuban agricultural soils: Implications for climate change and rice (Oryza sativa L.) production Dar AA; Chen Z; Rodríguez-Rodríguez S; Haghighat F; González-Rosales B; 38295640
ENCS
5 Refined design of ventilation systems to mitigate infection risk in hospital wards: Perspective from ventilation openings setting Ren C; Wang J; Feng Z; Kim MK; Haghighat F; Cao SJ; 37336354
ENCS
6 Intelligent operation, maintenance, and control system for public building: Towards infection risk mitigation and energy efficiency Ren C; Zhu HC; Wang J; Feng Z; Chen G; Haghighat F; Cao SJ; 36941886
ENCS
7 Comparison of photocatalysis and photolysis of 2,2,4,4-tetrabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-47): Operational parameters, kinetic studies, and data validation using three modern machine learning models Motamedi M; Yerushalmi L; Haghighat F; Chen Z; Zhuang Y; 36907486
ENCS
8 Impact of ionizers on prevention of airborne infection in classroom Ren C; Haghighat F; Feng Z; Kumar P; Cao SJ; 36474607
ENCS
9 Estimation of Anthropogenic VOCs Emission Based on Volatile Chemical Products: A Canadian Perspective Asif Z; Chen Z; Haghighat F; Nasiri F; Dong J; 36416924
ENCS
10 Dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 spreading under the influence of environmental factors and strategies to tackle the pandemic: A systematic review Asif Z; Chen Z; Stranges S; Zhao X; Sadiq R; Olea-Popelka F; Peng C; Haghighat F; Yu T; 35317188
ENCS
11 Recent developments in photocatalysis of industrial effluents ։ A review and example of phenolic compounds degradation Motamedi M; Yerushalmi L; Haghighat F; Chen Z; 35074327
ENCS
12 Removal of SARS-CoV-2 using UV+Filter in built environment: simulation/evaluation by utilizing validated numerical method Feng Z; Cao SJ; Haghighat F; 34367884
ENCS
13 Mitigating COVID-19 infection disease transmission in indoor environment using physical barriers Ren C; Xi C; Wang J; Feng Z; Nasiri F; Cao SJ; Haghighat F; 34306996
ENCS
14 Kinetic and reaction mechanism of generated by-products in a photocatalytic oxidation reactor: Model development and validation Malayeri M; Lee CS; Niu J; Zhu J; Haghighat F; 34182424
ENCS
15 Indoor airborne disinfection with electrostatic disinfector (ESD): Numerical simulations of ESD performance and reduction of computing time Feng Z; Cao SJ; Wang J; Kumar P; Haghighat F; 33994653
ENCS
16 The contribution of dry indoor built environment on the spread of Coronavirus: Data from various Indian states. V AAR, R V, Haghighat F 32834934
ENCS
17 Hierarchical magnetic petal-like Fe3O4-ZnO@g-C3N4 for removal of sulfamethoxazole, suppression of photocorrosion, by-products identification and toxicity assessment Mirzaei A; Chen Z; Haghighat F; Yerushalmi L; 29705637
ENCS
18 Photocatalytic degradation of sulfamethoxazole by hierarchical magnetic ZnO@g-C3N4: RSM optimization, kinetic study, reaction pathway and toxicity evaluation. Mirzaei A, Yerushalmi L, Chen Z, Haghighat F 30086522
ENCS
19 Hydrothermal/solvothermal synthesis and treatment of TiO2 for photocatalytic degradation of air pollutants: Preparation, characterization, properties, and performance. Mamaghani AH, Haghighat F, Lee CS 30572234
ENCS
20 Sonocatalytic removal of ampicillin by Zn(OH)F: Effect of operating parameters, toxicological evaluation and by-products identification. Mirzaei A, Haghighat F, Chen Z, Yerushalmi L 31054533
ENCS

 

Title:Impact of ionizers on prevention of airborne infection in classroom
Authors:Ren CHaghighat FFeng ZKumar PCao SJ
Link:pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36474607/
DOI:10.1007/s12273-022-0959-z
Publication:Building simulation
Keywords:classroominfection riskionizernegative ionsremoval efficiency
PMID:36474607 Category: Date Added:2022-12-07
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 School of Architecture, Southeast University, 2 Sipailou, Nanjing, 210096 China.
2 Energy and Environment Group, Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, H3G 1M8 Canada.
3 Global Centre for Clean Air Research (GCARE), School of Sustainability, Civil & Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering & Physical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, GU2 7XH UK.
4 Institute for Sustainability, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, GU2 7XH UK.

Description:

Infectious diseases (e.g., coronavirus disease 2019) dramatically impact human life, economy and social development. Exploring the low-cost and energy-saving approaches is essential in removing infectious virus particles from indoors, such as in classrooms. The application of air purification devices, such as negative ion generators (ionizers), gains popularity because of the favorable removal capacity for particles and the low operation cost. However, small and portable ionizers have potential disadvantages in the removal efficiency owing to the limited horizontal diffusion of negative ions. This study aims to investigate the layout strategy (number and location) of ionizers based on the energy-efficient natural ventilation in the classroom to improve removal efficiency (negative ions to particles) and decrease infection risk. Three infected students were considered in the classroom. The simulations of negative ion and particle concentrations were performed and validated by the experiment. Results showed that as the number of ionizers was 4 and 5, the removal performance was largely improved by combining ionizer with natural ventilation. Compared with the scenario without an ionizer, the scenario with 5 ionizers largely increased the average removal efficiency from around 20% to 85% and decreased the average infection risk by 23%. The setup with 5 ionizers placed upstream of the classroom was determined as the optimal layout strategy, particularly when the location and number of the infected students were unknown. This work can provide a guideline for applying ionizers to public buildings when natural ventilation is used.

Electronic supplementary material esm: the Appendix is available in the online version of this article at 10.1007/s12273-022-0959-z.




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