Experimental and theoretical investigation of particle-laden airflow under a prosthetic mechanical foot in motion |
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Authors: | AD Eisner J Rosati R Wiener |
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Affiliation: | 1. Alion Science and Technology, P.O. Box 12313, Durham, NC 27709, USA;2. National Homeland Security Research Center, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA |
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Abstract: | This research effort was aimed at understanding how foot motion affects air transport and thus how walking affects contaminant dispersion. Particle imaging velocimetry (PIV) showed that during a rotational motion of the foot (typical footstep), a draft corner flow develops that carries particles from heel to toe. Foot contact with the floor may result in one or both of two types of reentrainment: (1) particles become airborne due to detachment from the floor, and (2) particles are first collected by the foot cover (e.g., Tyvek) and then detached from the foot into the airflow produced by the foot rotation. The airflow under the rotating foot was modeled as a rotating corner flow, and it was shown that such modeling can capture major characteristics of the airflow generated by the rotating foot and can explain how rotational foot motion contributes to reentrainment and dispersion of contaminants. |
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Keywords: | Reentrainment Contaminant dispersion Particles Corner flow Walking |
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