?:abstract
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Motivated by the fact that the drying time of respiratory droplets is related to the spread of COVID-19 [R Bhardwaj and A Agrawal, \'Likelihood of survival of coronavirus in a respiratory droplet deposited on a solid surface,\' Phys Fluids 32, 061704, (2020)], we analyze the drying time of droplets ejected from a COVID-19 infected subject on surfaces of personal protection equipment (PPE), such as a face mask, of different wettabilities We report the ratio of drying time of the droplet on an ideal superhydrophobic surface (contact angle, theta -> 180 degrees) to an ideal hydrophilic surface (theta -> 0 degrees) and the ratio of the maximum to minimum drying time of the droplet on the surfaces with different contact angles The drying time is found to be maximum if theta = 148 degrees, while the aforementioned ratios are 4 6 and 4 8, respectively These ratios are independent of the droplet initial volume, ambient temperature, relative humidity, and thermophysical properties of the droplet and water vapor We briefly examine the change in drying time in the presence of impurities on the surface Besides being of fundamental interest, the analysis provides insights that are useful while designing the PPE to tackle the present pandemic
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