Division of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 3;16(3):e0248099. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0248099. eCollection 2021.
Since the appearance of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the question regarding the efficacy of various hygiene measures and the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) has become the focus of scientific and above all public discussion. To compare respirators, medical face masks, and cloth masks and determine if it is recommendable to wear face masks to protect the individual wearer of the mask from inhaling airborne particles, we challenged 29 different masks with aerosols and tested the pressure drop as a surrogate for breathing resistance owing to the mask material. We found that Type II medical face masks showed the lowest pressure drop (12.9±6.8 Pa/cm2) and therefore additional breathing resistance, whereas respirators such as the KN95 (32.3±7.0 Pa/cm2) and FFP2 (26.8±7.4 Pa/cm2) showed the highest pressure drops among the tested masks. The filtration efficacy of the mask material was the lowest for cloth masks (28±25%) followed by non-certified face masks (63±19%) and certified medical face masks (70±10%). The materials of the different respirators showed very high aerosol retentions (KN95 [94±4%] and FFP2 [98±1%]). For evaluating the as-worn filtration performance simulating real live conditions each mask type was also tested on a standardized dummy head. Cloth masks and non-EN-certified face masks had the worst as-worn filtration efficacies among the tested masks, filtering less than 20% of the test aerosol. Remarkably, certified type II medical face masks showed similar (p>0.5) as-worn filtration results (47±20%) than KN95 masks (41±4%) and FFP2 masks (65±27%), despite having a lower pressure drop. Face shields did not show any significant retention function against aerosols in our experiment. Our results indicate that it seems recommendable to wear face masks for providing base protection and risk reduction against inhaling airborne particles, in low-risk situations. In our study, especially EN 14683 type II certified medical face masks showed protective effectiveness against aerosols accompanied by minimal additional breathing resistance. FFP2 Respirators, on the other hand, could be useful in high-risk situations but require greater breathing effort and therefore physical stress for users.
自严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)出现以来,各种卫生措施的效果和个人防护设备(PPE)的使用问题已成为科学,尤其是公众讨论的焦点。为了比较口罩、医用口罩和布口罩,并确定佩戴口罩是否可以防止佩戴者吸入空气中的颗粒,我们用气溶胶挑战了 29 种不同的口罩,并测试了口罩材料引起的呼吸阻力的替代指标压降。我们发现,II 型医用口罩的压降最低(12.9±6.8 Pa/cm2),因此呼吸阻力也最大,而 KN95(32.3±7.0 Pa/cm2)和 FFP2(26.8±7.4 Pa/cm2)等呼吸器的压降在测试的口罩中最高。口罩材料的过滤效率最低,布口罩(28±25%),其次是非认证口罩(63±19%)和认证医用口罩(70±10%)。不同呼吸器的材料显示出非常高的气溶胶截留率(KN95[94±4%]和 FFP2[98±1%])。为了评估模拟真实生活条件下的佩戴过滤性能,我们还在标准化的假人头上测试了每种口罩类型。在测试的口罩中,布口罩和非 EN 认证口罩的佩戴过滤效果最差,过滤掉的测试气溶胶不到 20%。值得注意的是,与 KN95 口罩(41±4%)和 FFP2 口罩(65±27%)相比,认证的 II 型医用口罩的佩戴过滤效果(47±20%)相似(p>0.5),尽管其压降较低。在我们的实验中,面罩对气溶胶没有表现出任何显著的截留功能。我们的结果表明,在低风险情况下,佩戴口罩似乎可以为吸入空气中的颗粒提供基本保护和降低风险。在我们的研究中,特别是 EN 14683 型 II 级认证的医用口罩显示出对气溶胶的防护效果,同时呼吸阻力增加最小。另一方面,FFP2 呼吸器在高风险情况下可能有用,但需要使用者更大的呼吸努力和因此的身体压力。