SARS-CoV-2 survives and remains viable on surfaces for several days under
different environments as reported in recent studies. However, it is unclear
how the viruses survive for such a long time and why their survivability varies
across different surfaces. To address these questions, we conduct systematic
experiments investigating the evaporation of droplets produced by a nebulizer
and human-exhaled gas on surfaces. We found that these droplets do not
disappear with evaporation, but instead shrink to a size of a few micrometers
(referred to as residues), persist for more than 24 hours, and are highly
durable against changes of environmental conditions. The characteristics of
these residues change significantly across surface types. Specifically,
surfaces with high thermal conductivity like copper do not leave any resolvable
residues, while stainless steel, plastic, and glass surfaces form residues from
a varying fraction of all deposited droplets at 40% relative humidity. Lowering
humidity level suppresses the formation of residues while increasing humidity
level enhances it. Our results suggest that these microscale residues can
potentially insulate the virus against environmental changes, allowing them to
survive inhospitable environments and remain infectious for prolonged durations
after deposition. Our findings can also be extended to other viruses
transmitted through respiratory droplets (e.g., SARS-CoV, flu viruses, etc.),
and can thus lead to practical guidelines for disinfecting surfaces and other
prevention measures (e.g., humidity control) for limiting viral transmission.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure