maybe my concern about evaporation vs making droplets is irrelevant
I think that’s the case—if you look at more recent work they’ve used a wide range of ways of getting glycol into the air.
I wonder whether fog machines that are already installed in crowd-gathering venues could be used for infection control!
It’s more than that: fog machines used today (when used with glycols, which is the normal fog juice) are already performing infection control!
Are you planning any measurements of how far the TEG travels or how effectively the humidifier-generated droplets clean the air?
I’m not, though if anyone wanted to come test efficacy I’d be happy for them to measure the effect of us having it on sometimes and off other times.
I think that’s the case—if you look at more recent work they’ve used a wide range of ways of getting glycol into the air.
It’s more than that: fog machines used today (when used with glycols, which is the normal fog juice) are already performing infection control!
I’m not, though if anyone wanted to come test efficacy I’d be happy for them to measure the effect of us having it on sometimes and off other times.