
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
As we learn more about how COVID-19 spreads, it’s clear that air flow is a big deal, and that’s why masks are effective at slowing infection. That’s a problem for offices and commercial buildings and some homes, because over the last couple of decades buildings have less ventilation. Instead, they recirculate air to save energy by not letting that cooled or heated air escape. But these buildings also end up recirculating viruses, especially if heating and cooling systems aren’t paired with really good filters that remove viral particles from the air. Molly speaks with Jeffrey Siegel, a professor of engineering at the University of Toronto who specializes in indoor air quality.
4.5
12361,236 ratings
As we learn more about how COVID-19 spreads, it’s clear that air flow is a big deal, and that’s why masks are effective at slowing infection. That’s a problem for offices and commercial buildings and some homes, because over the last couple of decades buildings have less ventilation. Instead, they recirculate air to save energy by not letting that cooled or heated air escape. But these buildings also end up recirculating viruses, especially if heating and cooling systems aren’t paired with really good filters that remove viral particles from the air. Molly speaks with Jeffrey Siegel, a professor of engineering at the University of Toronto who specializes in indoor air quality.
1,647 Listeners
902 Listeners
4,359 Listeners
1,753 Listeners
8,659 Listeners
30,842 Listeners
1,358 Listeners
32,283 Listeners
2,171 Listeners
5,497 Listeners
1,438 Listeners
9,568 Listeners
10,141 Listeners
3,587 Listeners
6,259 Listeners
163 Listeners
2,749 Listeners
1,334 Listeners
90 Listeners