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  4. Salt Supersaturation as an Accelerator of Influenza A Virus Inactivation in 1 μL Droplets
 
research article

Salt Supersaturation as an Accelerator of Influenza A Virus Inactivation in 1 μL Droplets

Schaub, Aline
•
Luo, Beiping
•
David, Shannon
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October 11, 2024
Environmental Science & Technology

Influenza A virus (IAV) spreads through exhaled aerosol particles and larger droplets. Estimating the stability of IAV is challenging and depends on factors such as the respiratory matrix and drying kinetics. Here, we combine kinetic experiments on millimeter-sized saline droplets with a biophysical aerosol model to quantify the impact of NaCl on IAV stability. We show that IAV inactivation is determined by NaCl concentration, which increases during water evaporation and then decreases again when efflorescence occurs. When drying in air with relative humidity RH = 30%, inactivation follows an inverted sigmoidal curve, with inactivation occurring most rapidly when the NaCl concentration exceeds 20 mol/(kg H 2 O) immediately prior to efflorescence. Efflorescence reduces the NaCl molality to saturated conditions, resulting in a significantly reduced inactivation rate. We demonstrate that the inactivation rate k depends exponentially on NaCl molality, and after the solution reaches equilibrium, the inactivation proceeds at a first-order rate. Introducing sucrose, an organic cosolute, attenuates IAV inactivation via two mechanisms: first by decreasing the NaCl molality during the drying phase and second by a protective effect against the NaCl-induced inactivation. For both pure saline and sucrose-containing droplets, our biophysical model ResAM accurately simulates the inactivation when NaCl molality is used as the only inactivating factor. This study highlights the role of NaCl molality in IAV inactivation and provides a mechanistic basis for the observed inactivation rates.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.4c04734
10.1101/2023.12.21.572782
Author(s)
Schaub, Aline

EPFL

Luo, Beiping
David, Shannon

EPFL

Glas, Irina
Klein, Liviana
Costa, Laura  
Terrettaz, Céline  

EPFL

Bluvshtein, Nir
Motos, Ghislain  

EPFL

Violaki, Kalliopi  

EPFL

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Date Issued

2024-10-11

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Subjects

influenza A virus

•

expiratory droplet

•

salinity

•

airborne transmission

•

respiratory organics

URL

Link to the Preprint version

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.12.21.572782v2

Link to Experimental data

https://zenodo.org/records/11184180

Link to ResAM code

https://zenodo.org/records/13772156
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEV  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

Swiss National Science Foundation

189939

Available on Infoscience
October 11, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/241586
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