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Face Masks, Open Windows on Buses Reduce Potentially Infectious Particles in the Air

Colorado Springs, Colo., December 10, 2020 — Opening windows and using existing fans on a bus was shown to reduce exhaled airborne particles by up to 84%, and thereby could lower the risk of COVID-19 exposure according to research by MITRE using buses provided by the City of Colorado Springs Mountain Metro Transit and Colorado Springs School District 11. Wearing a mask alone can also reduce the spread of potentially infectious particles by 50% or more depending on the quality of the mask.

Those are the key findings of a MITRE study to test aerosol dispersion on buses and determine the best methods to control potentially infectious airborne particles such as COVID-19. When an infected person exhales, sneezes, or coughs, they create small aerosol particles containing the disease, which then spreads or is dispersed throughout the air space in the bus.

The study included more than 84 test runs on both school buses and low-floor transit buses using a mechanical cough simulator that dispersed the test aerosol while the buses drove normal routes over 10 days between August 3 and September 4, 2020. The safe sodium chloride test aerosol generated a variety of particle sizes down to 300 nanometers — similar to a human cough — and were detected by 28 sensors placed throughout the passenger areas.

No passengers were on the buses during the study. Unlike a highly engineered passenger cabin of a commercial aircraft, buses have turbulent environments where the airflow is not steady, making this kind of study complex. MITRE has also posted a video that shows the experiments in action.

After 78.3 million data points and 124 miles of on-the-road testing, key results include:

The MITRE team, led by scientist Nathan Edwards, worked to understand the risk of airborne particle transmission while riding on school and public transportation buses, and to bring scientific clarity of the best options for all public transportation systems.

While the results and recommendations seem intuitive, the data may help inform decisions on the best COVID-19 risk mitigation options for public transit.

The key findings and recommendations from this study are:

Editor’s note: View a video of the research.

About MITRE

MITRE’s mission-driven teams are dedicated to solving problems for a safer world. Through our public-private partnerships and federally funded R&D centers, we work across government and in partnership with industry to tackle challenges to the safety, stability, and well-being of our nation. Learn more at mitre.org.

Contact: media@mitre.org