Imagine every exhaled breath as a tiny cloud of invisible passengers—some harmless, some not. In crowded rooms, those clouds drift, mingle, and settle into lungs across the space. Traditional ventilation tries to dilute them, like opening a window in a smoky room. But what if you could catch those clouds right at the source, before they ever spread?
That's exactly what a team of mechanical engineers at the University of British Columbia in Okanagan, Canada, has designed: an air purification system that doesn't just clean the air—it hunts down exhaled aerosols like a targeted defense system. Published in Building and Environment, their jet-suction technology slashes infection risk to just 9.5%, compared to 91% with standard ventilation. It's not magic. It's physics meeting microbiology in a way that could reshape how Americans think about shared air.
What Aerosols Are—and Why They're So Hard to Stop
Aerosols are the microscopic droplets and particles exhaled with every breath, cough, or word. They behave like smoke: light enough to float, small enough to linger, and tricky enough to dodge most ventilation systems. Standard HVAC systems rely on dilution—mixing contaminated air with clean air and hoping the bad stuff gets filtered out eventually. But in a crowded office or clinic, that "eventually" can mean pathogens reach a dozen people before the system even notices.
Think of it like trying to catch dandelion seeds with a ceiling fan. Scattering them doesn't stop them from landing.
Dr. Sunny Lee, a professor in UBC Okanagan's School of Engineering and co-author of the study, explains the problem with current personalized ventilation systems—those airplane-style vents that blow clean air directly at passengers. "A person must remain in one position, and multiple people must use the same system simultaneously," he notes. Plus, constant exposure to that directed airflow can dry out skin and eyes, turning comfort into irritation.
How Jet-Suction Airflow Works
The new system doesn't push clean air at people—it pulls contaminated air away from them. The team calls it "jet-suction" or "induction-removal" airflow, and the concept is elegantly simple: create a localized air current that continuously draws exhaled aerosols into a nearby purification zone before they can disperse.
Picture an invisible shield that wraps around a person, gently but persistently sucking contaminated particles toward a cleaning station. It's like having a tiny, tireless vacuum hovering near every breath, redirecting pathogens before they become anyone else's problem.
Using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, the research team—led by first author Dr. Mojtaba Zabihi—modeled breathing patterns, body heat, and airflow over 30 minutes in a shared space. They compared their device against three other approaches: standard room ventilation, individual supply ventilation (the airplane model), and individual exhaust ventilation.
The Mechanism Behind Aerosol Capture
The system works by creating carefully engineered air currents that redirect exhaled aerosols into a purification zone. Unlike whole-room dilution, which treats all air equally, jet-suction targets the source. Dr. Zabihi emphasizes the challenge: "Room layouts and ventilation systems differ significantly. This makes it difficult to improve existing heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems."
In the team's simulations, the jet-suction device captured aerosols so effectively that during the first 15 minutes, only 10 particles out of 540,000 reached another person. That's 0.0019%—a near-total interception. Over the full 30-minute period, the system removed up to 94% of airborne pathogens.
Why This Matters for Infection Prevention
Indoor air quality has become a priority concern in the U.S., especially in hospitals, schools, and offices where people gather for hours. Airborne transmission of pathogens isn't just a pandemic worry—it's a constant challenge in healthcare settings, where immunocompromised patients are vulnerable, and in classrooms, where close contact is unavoidable.
Current solutions have trade-offs. HEPA filters clean air but don't prevent initial exposure. UV light systems work but require careful installation and maintenance. Ionizers raise questions about byproducts. Standard ventilation systems, even upgraded ones, still allow significant pathogen spread because they rely on dilution rather than capture.
The jet-suction approach changes the equation: instead of cleaning the room's air after contamination, it intercepts contamination at the source.
Comparison with Traditional Ventilation Systems
The numbers tell the story. In the team's simulations, infection risk varied dramatically by system type. Standard room ventilation left infection risk at 91%—nearly everyone exposed. Individual supply ventilation (the airplane model) dropped it to 47.6%, better but still leaving nearly half the room at risk. Individual exhaust ventilation managed 38%.
But the jet-suction device? Just 9.5%. That's a tenfold improvement over standard systems and a fivefold improvement over personalized ventilation.
Real-World Applications and Implications
Imagine this technology in a hospital waiting room during flu season. Instead of patients sitting in a shared cloud of respiratory droplets, each seating area has a jet-suction unit quietly pulling exhaled air into a purification zone. Infection risk plummets, and vulnerable patients—those with weakened immune systems or chronic conditions—gain a layer of protection that current ventilation can't provide.
Or picture a conference room in an office building. Ten people meet for an hour. With standard ventilation, aerosols from one person's cough circulate freely. With jet-suction, those aerosols are captured within seconds, never reaching colleagues across the table.
In schools, where classrooms pack 25 students into tight quarters for six hours a day, the technology could reduce absenteeism and protect teachers who face repeated exposure. In airports, transit hubs, or senior care facilities—anywhere people share air for extended periods—jet-suction offers a targeted, efficient alternative to whole-room approaches.
The beauty of jet-suction is its adaptability—it works with existing infrastructure, targeting local zones rather than requiring full HVAC overhauls. The team indicates that prototype development and cost analysis are next steps before commercial deployment timelines can be established.
What This Means for Indoor Air Quality
This research is still simulation-based, which means the next step is prototype testing in real-world environments. The authors indicate that building and scaling up prototypes are the immediate priorities. Real-world variables—human movement, temperature fluctuations, varying room geometries—will test whether the simulated performance holds up.
But the principle is sound, and the potential is significant. If jet-suction systems prove effective in practice, they could become standard in high-risk environments: hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, schools, and public transit. The technology doesn't replace ventilation—it enhances it, adding a layer of targeted protection where it matters most.
For U.S. facility managers, healthcare administrators, and school districts, this represents a new tool in the indoor air quality toolkit. It's not about choosing between HEPA filters or UV light or better ventilation—it's about integrating capture-at-source technology into a comprehensive air safety strategy.
The research builds on principles showing that airflow patterns matter more than sheer air volume. It's a reminder that in microbiology, as in life, location is everything. Pathogens don't spread evenly—they follow air currents, body heat, and breathing patterns. Catch them early, and the game changes.
The invisible passengers in every breath might finally have a one-way ticket out.

