Purify the Air Supply

Has your time spent indoors increased during the COVID-19 pandemic as a result of stay-at-home and shelter-in-place policies worldwide? Your challenge is to use the International Space Station (ISS) as inspiration and develop a system to monitor and/or purify indoor air. It is entirely up to you whether the system you design is able to be used on Earth (for example in homes, businesses, transportation, etc.) and/or in space.

Viral Droplet Sensor

Summary

In response to Space Apps’ Purify the Air Supply challenge, we’ve designed a wearable sensor that monitors concentrations of microdroplets in the user’s vicinity. The likelihood of contracting airborne infectious diseases from someone you know is much higher than most people are aware of, making indoor shared spaces prime candidates for improved air quality monitoring. Our sensor detects local microdroplets generated by coughing and sneezing and alerts users when they exceed safe concentrations, enabling them to practice proper social distancing. Not only can our wearable device help defeat COVID-19, it can be implemented in the long-term to raise awareness of viral droplets in indoor air.

How We Addressed This Challenge

Our wearable device packages a microdroplet sensor in a user-friendly wristband that alerts users when they are not practicing proper social  distancing techniques. Instantaneous air sampling and virus identification is exceedingly difficult and hard to make accessible for a wider demographic. Instead, our sensor detects the presence of local droplets to inform users of their risk level for contracting an airborne disease. If the sensor detects high concentrations of droplets, the user is in a high risk environment. If the sensor detects low concentrations (the base case), the user is in a low risk environment. Our technology hopes to reduce the unpreparedness and fear of walking into spaces of unknown contagiousness.

Our sensor specifically targets the detection of microdroplets, particles that usually cannot be seen by the naked eye. The size of these droplets make them dangerous for three reasons:

  1. Microdroplets are often ignored because they are not readily visible.
  2. Microdroplets have a higher rate of deposition in our respiratory systems. They are more likely to enter our lungs and wreak havoc.
  3. Smaller aerosols linger in the air. Unlike larger aerosols that fall quickly to the ground, smaller aerosols remain in the air closer to our mouths, where they’re more likely to be inhaled.

The risk of inhaling these droplets is higher in indoor spaces because air flow is limited. Our solution was inspired by similar challenges experienced by the International Space Station. The ISS is a closed-loop system where ambient air quality monitoring is essential to the health and well-being of our astronauts. Consistent air monitoring allows them to reduce the occurrences of illness in a confined space. Similarly, we would like to reduce the occurrences of infectious disease by providing consistent indoor air monitoring for all.

How We Developed This Project

After seeing the health and economic fallout due to COVID-19 and considering the possibility of a second wave later this year, we were inspired to take a swing at the challenging problem of designing a wearable real time sensor that could possible tell an individual when they’ve walked into a room with a dangerous density of microdroplets in the air.  Not all droplets contain coronavirus but the working hypothesis of the CDC is that virus containing droplets emitted by an infected person and inhaled by a second person has been the leading cause of the spread of COVID-19.

Our basic approach with the design consists of an array of electrodes of suitable geometry to capture microdroplets with diameters in the range of 100nm to 10m based on data from NIH and NASA. We considered the use of our device indoors on Earth and in the ISS. 

We found it challenging to consider the detailed physics regarding the interaction of droplets with the sensor at the microscopic scale, especially in consideration of what we think will be a high degree of sensitivity required for successful functioning of the sensor.  We further validated our ideas by creating a 3D model of them using Solidworks.  We also went through an EXTREME amount of trial and error in our quest to demonstrate a prototype.  But it was good times!

Project Code
Data & Resources

[1] ‘COVID-19 United States Cases by County’, Johns Hopkins University  https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/us-map

[2] ‘ISS Ambient Air Quality: Updated Inventory on Known Aerosol Sources’ M. Meyer, NASA Glenn Research Center 2014

https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20150000882.pdf

[3] ‘Generation and Behavior of Airborne Particles (Aerosols)’ P. Baron, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/aerosols/pdfs/Aerosol_101.pdf

[4] ‘The Size and Concentration of Droplets Generated by Coughing in Human Subjects’ S. Yang et al. 2007

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5690136_The_Size_and_Concentration_of_Droplets_Generated_by_Coughing_in_Human_Subjects

[5] ‘Quantity and Size Distribution of Cough-Generated Aerosol Particles Produced by Influenza Patients During and After Illness’ W. Lindsey et al. 2012

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4676262/

Tags
#spaceapps #microdropletmadness #covid19 #wearables #sensors #wristband #socialdistancing #prototyping #solidworks #zoom
Global Judging
This project was submitted for consideration during the Space Apps Global Judging process.