Organisers:
Why? The recent COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the important role respiratory droplets and aerosols play in infectious disease transmission. Disease outbreaks, such as measles, tuberculosis, influenza and coronavirus, can be driven, in whole or large part, by emissions of pathogen-laden particles that infect nearby individuals. While epidemiological and/or physiological in-silico simulations have become key technologies for optimizing responses by clinicians and policy makers around the world, modeling the formation of respiratory aerosols is still largely an unsolved problem.
Challenges: it is generally established that respiratory droplets are formed from the fluid lining of the respiratory tract. However, unlike modeling of the fate of inhaled aerosols, modeling the formation of respiratory aerosols is a much less studied area. This is largely due to the unresolved nonlinear viscoelastic nature of airway mucus and nasopharyngeal liquids that prevents faithful predictions of droplet formation and size distributions. To date, there is very little mechanistic understanding from first principles of the rupture of viscoelastic liquids caused by high shear arising from high-Reynolds number airflow or from the closing and opening of wet membranes. Predicting the mucus breakup and droplet size distribution resulting from shear stress fragmentation is non-trivial because mucus is a viscoelastic shear-thinning fluid subject to surface tension. This enables multiple instabilities to bear on this problem. Similarly, rupture of a fluid meniscus generated by closing and opening of wet membranes is difficult to predict given the major role of moving boundaries, the large range of length and time scales implicated in this phenomenon, and especially the unresolved non-Newtonian properties of the fluids involved, i.e., mucus in the small airways and vocal cords, and saliva in the mouth, tongue, and lips.
Workshop aim and output: this Workshop will bring together the key players to promote multidisciplinary collaboration and to specify the scientific, medical, computational, and engineering needs requires to solve the challenge at hand. We aim at hosting a mix of international and local scientists, both senior and early career, as well as students, to create opportunities for exchanges, collaboration, and networking. Required expertise includes aerosol science related to respiratory droplets and their experimental and clinical aspects, mathematical and computational modelling of viscoelastic fluids, and software engineering.
The workshop will be a mix of podium presentations, working groups (WG) sessions and roundtable discussions. There will be three working groups focusing on:
Each working group will be co-chaired by one senior level and one early career participant. WG sessions will typically be 90 minutes long: the first 60 minutes will be dedicated to break-out sessions where each WG will discuss the session topics based on their focus. This will be followed by a 30-minutes general session where each WG will summarize their findings and identified needs/gaps followed by a discussion on how the different WG could work together to address these needs/gaps. Inputs from these discussions will be used to draft a roadmap to solve the problem at hand.
Outputs of a successful workshop will be:
Tentative programme:
The program foresees a mix of experimental, mathematical formulation and computational modeling sessions. During the workshop we will explore how in-vivo/in-vitro data can be used to inform and validate modeling. An effort will be made to identify key gaps in the available data. The program has been developed to maximize open format interactions. Each breakout session will have a set of questions/topics to be addressed by the working groups.
Thursday
Break-out sessions 4: Conceptual work/implementation strategies
Participants:
We would like to invite mix of international and local scientists, both senior and early career, as well as students.