PANDEMIC TABLETOP SYSTEM AND METHODS FOR PREVENTING PATHOGEN TRANSMISSION
20210025605 ยท 2021-01-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24F13/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F2221/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F8/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F7/065
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F5/0096
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F24F5/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24F13/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The invention provides, in some aspects, a tabletop-based system to prevent pathogen transmission that includes a collection vent that collects airflow from a volumetric region above a tabletop, a filter that filters the collected airflow and that is in fluid coupling with the collection vent, an air mover that creates the airflow through the volumetric region to the vent, and one or more surfaces that define the region, where those surfaces include at least the tabletop. According to these aspects of the invention, the vent is disposed in a vicinity of at least one of the aforesaid surfaces and is elongate along an axis substantially aligned with a useable edge of the tabletop, i.e., an edge of the tabletop at which a person who is using the tabletop sits, kneels, stands or is otherwise disposed.
Claims
1. A tabletop-based system to prevent pathogen transmission, comprising A. a collection vent that collects airflow from a volumetric region above a tabletop, B. a filter that filters the collected airflow and that is in fluid coupling with the collection vent, C. an air mover that creates the airflow through the volumetric region to the vent, D. one or more surfaces that define the region, the surfaces including a least said tabletop, and E. the vent being disposed in a vicinity of at least one of the surfaces and being elongate along an axis that is substantially aligned with a useable edge of the tabletop.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the tabletop comprises a surface of a desk.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the tabletop and one or more other of said surfaces define an alcove.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the collection vent is disposed adjacent the tabletop.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein the collection vent is disposed adjacent an edge of the tabletop.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein the collection vent is disposed adjacent an edge of the tabletop opposed to the usable edge.
7. The system of claim 4, wherein the collection vent is coupled to a duct that routes to the filter airflow collected from the region by the collection vent.
8. The system of claim 6, wherein the collection vent comprises a portion of the duct having one or more apertures that collect airflow from the region.
9. The system of claim 6, wherein the air mover comprises any of a fan and a vacuum pump in fluid coupling with the duct.
10. The system of claim 1, wherein the filter comprises a HEPA filter.
11. The system of claim 1, comprising an exhaust vent disposed to circulate to an environment in a vicinity of the tabletop airflow that has passed through the filter.
12. The system of claim 1, wherein the one or more surfaces that define the volumetric region include a top barrier.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein the tabletop is disposed at a height of a midsection of a person using the tabletop, and wherein the top barrier is disposed at a height above a head or just below eye level of such person.
14. The system of claim 12, wherein the collection vent is disposed adjacent the top barrier.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein the collection vent is disposed adjacent an edge of the top barrier.
16. The system of claim 1, wherein the vent is disposed adjacent the tabletop centrally with respect to the usable edge and an edge opposed to the useable edge.
17. The system of claim 16, wherein the one or more surfaces comprise a facing barrier that is disposed normal to the tabletop centrally with respect to the usable edge and the opposing edge, wherein the facing barrier has opposing faces parallel to those edges.
18. The system of claim 17, wherein the facing barrier is positioned to permit airflow to the collection vent from volumetric regions above the tabletop between the usable edge and the edge opposed thereto.
19. The system of claim 1, wherein the one or more surfaces include one or more side barriers disposed normal to the tabletop and to the usable edge.
20. The system of claim 1, wherein the one or more surfaces include the tabletop, and one or more of (i) a top barrier disposed offset from and above the tabletop, (ii) a facing barrier that is disposed normal to the tabletop and parallel to the useable edge, (iii) a side barrier that is disposed normal to the tabletop and to the useable edge.
21. A tabletop-based system to vitiate pathogen transmission, comprising A. a collection vent that collects airflow from a volumetric region above a tabletop, B. an exhaust vent that is in fluid coupling with the collection event and that exhausts the collected airflow away from the tabletop, C. an air mover that creates the airflow through the volumetric region to the vent, D. one or more surfaces that define the region, the surfaces including a least said tabletop, and E. the vent being disposed in a vicinity of at least one of the surfaces and being elongate along an axis that is substantially aligned with a useable edge of the tabletop.
22. The system of claim 21, wherein the exhaust van exhausts the collected airflow away from a room in which the tabletop is disposed.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENT
[0020] A more complete understanding of the invention may be attained by reference to the drawings, in which
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENT
[0026] Described below are systems and methods that establish airflows within volumetric regions above desktops and tabletops (hereinafter, collectively, tabletops) at which persons work and/or converse in order to corral and divert, e.g., for filtration or otherwise, their exhalants and, thereby, prevent smaller particles or aerosols in them from lingering in environmental air currents and infecting others. As used here, the term exhalant refers to breath, particulates and other gasses, liquids and/or solids expelled by persons through the nose or mouth, regardless of whether they are breathing, laughing, coughing, sneezing speaking or otherwise.
[0027] The systems and methods shown herein can additionally rely on the physical barriers presented by the tabletops themselvesand, in some embodiments, on those presented by facing barriers, top barriers and/or side barriersto not only corral and divert exhalants and the smaller particles (or aerosols) therein but also to stop the momentum of larger particles expelled with those exhalants, thereby, further preventing the unwanted transmission of pathogens.
[0028]
[0029] And, although illustrated table 103 is depicted as including a square or rectangular tabletop 103a at sitting height (i.e., at a height of a midsection of a person using the tabletop 103a in a sitting position), in other embodiments, the tabletop 103a may be of another shape or at another height and/or orientation. Thus, by way of non-limiting example, the tabletop 103a may be round or of an unconventional shape, and it may be at a standing height (e.g., as in the case of tables at bars, libraries, public registries and so forth, wherein the table is at the height of the midsection of a standing person), at kneeling height, and so forth, all by way of non-limiting example.
[0030] Illustrated table 103 may be intended and/or used for any purpose (e.g., working, studying eating, teaching, reading, and so forth) by one or more persons who are facing, leaning on and/or otherwise using it (hereinafter, collectively, using) and who, in connection therewith, are expelling exhalant and/or other bodily emissions along a vector p originating at the respective user and extending across the tabletop in the direction that the user is facingtypically, a direction paralleling illustrated axis y.
[0031] In the illustrated embodiment, two peopleconversants 106, 107are shown facing the table as if talking to one another, though, in other embodiments, the table 103 may be used by a single person or many more people. Embodiments of the table 103 intended for only one person, who is studying, reading or working from a sitting posture is often referred to as a desk and its surface as a desktopboth of which terms are used synonymously with table and tabletop herein.
[0032] The discussion that follows is directed to structural and other features of the illustrated embodiment as the pertain to preventing the transmission of pathogens contained in exhalant of a single conversant 106. However, it will be appreciated from the discussion and the attached drawings that those features can be implemented for any and all other conversants (e.g., in this case, conversant 107) and/or other people using the table 103.
[0033] Disposed on or adjacent the tabletop 103 is an elongate collection vent 101. This may be disposed at an edge of the tabletop 103a opposite that edge at which the user sits, stands or is otherwise disposed when using the table 103the latter edge of which is referred to as a useable edge elsewhere herein. In other embodiments, the vent 101 may be disposed at that usable edge or, in still other embodiments, at an adjacent edge of the tabletop 103a (to wit, an edge at either side of the user).
[0034] In some embodiments, vent 101 is not disposed along an edge of the tabletop 103a but, rather, is disposed on or adjacent the surface of the tabletop 103a itself, as is illustrated vis--vis tabletop 103a in
[0035] Distancing of the vent 101 from the user 106 is based on the expected use case. Thus, in a desktop environment, the vent 101 is typically positioned adjacent the edge of the tabletop 103a at which the user is disposed or at arm's length therefrom, e.g., so as not to obstruct the user's use of the tabletop 103a. In embodiments such as those shown in
[0036] In still other embodiments, the vent 101 is disposed substantially above the tabletop 103a, as in the case of the embodiment illustrated in
[0037] Vent 101, which comprises a conduit, tubing, duct or other elongate via (collectively, duct) features air holes 104, slots, or other apertures, collects airflow 108 within the volumetric region 109 above a tabletop 103a and, more particularly, an airflow within a volume roughly defined, at one boundary, by the respective user (e.g., 106) of the table 103 and, at another volumetric boundary, by the tabletop 103a toward which he/she is facing. In embodiments in which the tabletop 103a is positioned directly adjacent one or more walls of an office, workroom or other alcove (not shown), the region can be further defined by that or those wall(s). Likewise, in embodiments which utilize them, that region can be defined by one or more barriers disposed in or around the tabletop 103a, e.g., as illustrated in
[0038] Practically speaking, the volumetric region can be visualized as the region above the tabletop 103a in front of that user in the direction of his/her respective vector pi.e., the region into which the user's exhalant is expelled during the course of breathing, coughing, sneezing, talking and/or otherwise using the table 103.
[0039] In some embodiments, the collection vent 101 routes airflow 108 collected from the aforesaid volumetric region 109 through a filter that forms part of the vent 101 and/or to which that vent is in fluid coupling by means of a duct. Such an arrangement is shown by way of example in the embodiment of
[0040] In embodiments, such as those shown in
[0041] To facilitate such routing of the airflow 108, unit 230 of the illustrated embodiment includes an air mover (not shown), such as a fan or vacuum, per convention in the art as adapted in accord with the teachings hereof. Though such an air mover can be powered sufficiently to move airflow 108 collected at the vent 101 through the duct 231 and filter 230, preferably, the air mover is so powered as to create an airflow 108 within volume 109 of sufficient power to entrain at least aerosols contained in exhalant emitted by the user 106, if not also larger particles potentially in that exhalant containing pathogens.
[0042] Other embodiments of the type discussed above forego use of a filter in unit 230, relying, instead upon the air mover to route airflow collected by the vent 101 away from the table 103 and, more particularly, away from the users 106, 107, thereofpreferably into the outdoors or into another room away from people.
[0043] As noted above, tabletop 103 can include one or more barriers that further define the volumetric region 109 and that not only corral and divert exhalants and the smaller particles (or aerosols) therein but also stop the momentum of larger particles expelled with those exhalants. Examples of those barriersnone, some or all of which may be incorporated into any particular embodimentare shown in
[0044] Each of the barriers in the illustrated embodiment comprises a sheet-like or planar material, such as wallboard, window glass, sheet metal, plexiglass, and so forth, treated or untreated for safety, sound-dampening, privacy and so forth, all in the manner known in the art as adapted in accord with the teachings hereof. Significantly, each of the barriers presents a surface defining a respective boundary of volume 109 in order to corral, divert and/or stop the momentum of pathogens in exhalants, as noted above.
[0045] Facing barrier 100 is disposed normal to the tabletop 103a and extends upwardly therefrom. As with vent 101 of
[0046] Side barrier 111 is likewise disposed normal to the tabletop 103a and extends upwardly therefrom. It can, likewise, also be disposed at an edge of the tabletop 103a or along the surface thereof, and it can likewise be disposed an arm's distance or more away from the user 106. Unlike facing barrier 100, which is disposed transverse to vector p or axis y (and which, therefore, tends to face the user 106), side barrier is disposed parallel to vector p or axis y (and, therefore, tends to be disposed at the side of the user 106).
[0047] Top barrier 208 is disposed offset from and above the tabletop 103a, typically, at a height above that of the head of user 106, or just below eye level in embodiments that enable eye-to-eye contact. It can be angled, e.g., away from the user, or it can parallel tabletop 103a, all as is within the ken of those skilled in the art in view of the teachings hereof.
[0048] In operation, a user 106 desiring to use a tabletop system as described above disposes him- or herself at the tabletop 103a, either sitting, standing, kneeling or otherwise as per the height of the tabletop 103 and the intended use. The air mover incorporated into or coupled with unit 230 creates and/or collects an airflow 108 within the volume 109, drawing at least aerosols in the user's exhalant into the vent 101, where they travel through the filter media therein and/or out vent 232 for recirculation or disposal.
[0049] Described above and shown in the drawings are systems and methods achieving the objects presented earlier, among others. It will be appreciated that the embodiments described and shown herein are merely examples of the invention and that other embodiments, making changes to those presented herein are within the scope of the invention, of which I claim the following.