scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Designing antiviral surfaces to suppress the spread of COVID-19

TLDR
In this paper, the authors explored the disjoining pressure-driven thin-film evaporation mechanism and thereby the virucidal properties of engineered surfaces with varied wettability and texture.
Abstract
Surface engineering is an emerging technology to design antiviral surfaces, especially in the wake of COVID-19 pandemic. However, there is yet no general understanding of the rules and optimized conditions governing the virucidal properties of engineered surfaces. The understanding is crucial for designing antiviral surfaces. Previous studies reported that the drying time of a residual thin-film after the evaporation of a bulk respiratory droplet on a smooth surface correlates with the coronavirus survival time. Recently, we [Chatterjee et al., Phys. Fluids. 33, 021701 (2021)] showed that the evaporation is much faster on porous than impermeable surfaces, making the porous surfaces lesser susceptible to virus survival. The faster evaporation on porous surfaces was attributed to an enhanced disjoining pressure within the thin-film due the presence of horizontally oriented fibers and void spaces. Motivated by this, we explore herein the disjoining pressure-driven thin-film evaporation mechanism and thereby the virucidal properties of engineered surfaces with varied wettability and texture. A generic model is developed which agrees qualitatively well with the previous virus titer measurements on nanostructured surfaces. Thereafter, we design model surfaces and report the optimized conditions for roughness and wettability to achieve the most prominent virucidal effect. We have deciphered that the optimized thin-film lifetime can be gained by tailoring wettability and roughness, irrespective of the nature of texture geometry. The present study expands the applicability of the process and demonstrates ways to design antiviral surfaces, thereby aiding to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical design principles of next-generation antiviral surface coatings.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the latest efforts to develop antiviral surface coatings that exhibit virus-inactivating functions through disrupting lipid envelopes or protein capsids and highlighted the need to build a strong mechanistic understanding of the chemical design principles that underpin antiviral surfaces coatings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating a transparent coating on a face shield for repelling airborne respiratory droplets.

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact dynamics of microliter droplets with a varying impact velocity and angle of attack on coated and non-coated surfaces are analyzed. And the authors demonstrate that the face shield, coated by silica nanoparticles solution, becomes superhydrophobic and results in nominal hysteresis to the underlying surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

How coronavirus survives for hours in aerosols.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the physical mechanism and governing rules behind the significantly long survival of coronavirus in aerosols, which is the subject of the present investigation, and they attributed the virus survival timescale to the fact that the drying of small ( ∼μm-nm) droplets is governed by the excess internal pressure within the droplet, which stems from the disjoining pressure due to the cohesive intermolecular interaction between the liquid molecules and the Laplace-pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insight on the evaporation dynamics in reducing the COVID-19 infection triggered by respiratory droplets

TL;DR: A physical understanding of evaporation dynamics on solid surfaces with a stick-slip mode may help in better design of a face mask, PPE kit, and other protective equipment used in public places in order to minimize the chances of infection and tackle the current pandemic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Double masking protection vs. comfort-A quantitative assessment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report a systematic quantitative unsteady pressure measurement supplement with flow visualization to quantify the effectiveness of a single and double mask, which consists of a surgical mask and an N-95 mask.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Wetting: statics and dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an attempt towards a unified picture with special emphasis on certain features of "dry spreading": (a) the final state of a spreading droplet need not be a monomolecular film; (b) the spreading drop is surrounded by a precursor film, where most of the available free energy is spent; and (c) polymer melts may slip on the solid and belong to a separate dynamical class, conceptually related to the spreading of superfluids.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Review of Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19).

TL;DR: The disease is mild in most people; in some (usually the elderly and those with comorbidities), it may progress to pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and multi organ dysfunction and many people are asymptomatic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wetting and Spreading

TL;DR: In this article, the surface forces that lead to wetting are considered, and the equilibrium surface coverage of a substrate in contact with a drop of liquid is examined, while the hydrodynamics of both wetting and dewetting is influenced by the presence of the three-phase contact line separating "wet" regions from those that are either dry or covered by a microscopic film.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wetting and Roughness

TL;DR: In this article, the roughness of a solid is discussed, and it is shown that both the apparent contact angle and the contact angle hysteresis can be dramatically affected by the presence of roughness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contact angle, wetting, and adhesion: a critical review

TL;DR: In this article, the theory of the contact angle of pure liquids on solids, and of the determination of the surface free energy of solids was reviewed, and an algebraic expression for these properties in terms of measured contact angles was presented.
Related Papers (5)