Quantifying Uncertainty in Low Velocity Human Aspiration Studies: Effect of Secondary Aspiration and Thin-walled Reference Sampling in Low Velocity Conditions
Kimberly Rose Anderson
University of Iowa
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
Summer 2013
DOI: 10.17077/etd.e81ckclr
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<p>In order to evaluate a biologically relevant measure of exposure, inhalable samplers are designed to match the aspiration efficiency of the human head. Human inhalability is evaluated in wind tunnel studies using mannequins as human surrogates or using numerical and computational methods. There has been differences between human aspiration efficiency estimates using wind tunnel studies and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling, particularly for larger particle sizes (>68 µm). The objective of this dissertation was to evaluate biases in low velocity inhalability studies in an effort to explain the discrepancies in results between experimental and computational inhalability studies. This research addressed the phenomena of secondary aspiration on human facial skin, evaluated the appropriateness of mannequin surfaces as surrogates for humans, and evaluated the performance of the thin-walled reference sampler in low velocities to quantify potential biases in low velocity inhalability studies.</p>
<p>The first study determined a realistic coefficient of restitution (CoR) for human facial skin over a range of ages under nine environmental conditions. This study found human facial skin is non-uniform across the face and identified significant interaction between age and sampling location, indicating that how CoR varies with age is dependent on the location sampled.</p>
<p>The second study applied the average CoR values for forehead, cheeks and nose in CFD simulations to evaluate the effect of secondary aspiration on human aspiration efficiency estimates and determine how refined the CoR value needed to be to accurately model human aspiration efficiency. This study identified significant increases in aspiration when allowing for particle bounce, but no significant differences between uniform CoRs of 0.5, 0.8 and 1.0, indicating differences between different mannequin surfaces and particle interactions would have minimal effect on aspiration efficiency estimates.</p>
<p>The third study evaluated the performance of a horizontally-aligned reference sampler in low wind speeds (0.1 to 0.4 m s<sup>-1</sup>). While significant differences from unity were identified, differences ranged from -1 to 6% and would have a negligible effect on sampler efficiency estimates. The use of a horizontally-aligned isokinetic reference sampler was found to be appropriate in freestream velocities ranging from 0.1 to 0.4 m s<sup>-1</sup>.</p>
Computational Fluid Dynamics Occupational Health and Industrial Hygiene human aspiration efficiency sampler efficiency secondary aspiration
Details
Title: Subtitle
Quantifying Uncertainty in Low Velocity Human Aspiration Studies: Effect of Secondary Aspiration and Thin-walled Reference Sampling in Low Velocity Conditions
Creators
Kimberly Rose Anderson - University of Iowa
Contributors
T R. Anthony (Advisor)
Thomas Peters (Committee Member)
Patrick O'Shaughnessy (Committee Member)
Jacob Oleson (Committee Member)
Charlie Stanier (Committee Member)
Resource Type
Dissertation
Degree Awarded
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
Degree in
Occupational and Environmental Health
Date degree season
Summer 2013
Publisher
University of Iowa
DOI
10.17077/etd.e81ckclr
Number of pages
viii, 192 pages
Copyright
Copyright 2013 Kimberly R. Anderson
Language
English
Description illustrations
illustrations (some color)
Description bibliographic
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-192).
Academic Unit
Occupational and Environmental Health
Record Identifier
9983777197302771
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Quantifying Uncertainty in Low Velocity Human Aspiration Studies: