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Project: EasyPAPR - a DIY powered respirator

Table of Contents

Disclaimers:

No doctors or safety scientists were involved

Some HEPA filters may contain glass and injure your lungs, be careful!

CO2 buildup from improper design can be fatal

This is a thought experiment, build at your own risk

This may not work at all

This could injure or suffocate you

Small parts / choking hazard

Overview

This project is exploring how to build a PAPR - Powered Air Purifying Respirator out of ordinary household items.

Video: Demonstration Video

A 12v blower pulls air in through a 0.1 micron HEPA filter disigned for a vacuum cleaner. The air is pumped out through a hose into a helmet. Each component and assembly step should have multiple alternative solutions to account for limited availability of parts, tools, and assembly skill.

Background

The Covid-19 pandemic has spurred a great deal of creativity channeled into many projects. This project is aimed at being helpful in the intermediate to long-term timeframe. In between the immediate urgent need for homemade cloth masks and the eventual wave of professional medical products being available, I believe there is a need for a solution that is simple to build, effective, and made out of ordinary materials. The agenda at this time is to iterate on refining and measuring the design, not to "build N number of masks and rush them to X location for immediate use".

Call for help

As this project progresses and multiple prototypes are built, the problem transitions from raw engineering to objective measurement and refinement. What I really need right now is good scientific advice in these areas:

  • How can the effectiveness of this design be safely tested? (see Testing Methodology below)
  • What other safety risks am I failing to consider?
  • How can this design be made more simple using less materials without losing effectiveness?

Design

Questions and Assumptions:

  • Is this HEPA filter safe to breath through (no glass fibers) ?
  • Is this HEPA filter able to remove dangerous particles such as virus and bacteria?
  • Does positive pressure eliminate the need for an airtight solution?
  • Is this safe to use regarding delivery of enough air and CO2 buildup?
  • Can this can be used many times without changing the filter?
  • Can the parts other than the filter be effectively cleaned?

Goals:

  • Use measuring devices to objectively demonstrate effectiveness
  • No tape/glue: fully disasseblable for cleaning purposes
  • Propose multiple commoDesignn materials for each component
  • Propose multiple assembly techniques to using tools present in ordinary homes
  • Durable
  • Comfortable

Current status

Already built

  • Testing rig without a helmet. Filter connected to pump and hose going into a measurement chamber
  • Several prototypes for walking around and testing

ToDo:

  • Use 265nm UV LEDs shining on both inside and outside of HEPA filter material
  • Case with belt to enclose both battery and filter. Allow air in but keep UV light from escaping
  • Speed controller for motor
  • Reshape hood to leave ears exposed
  • Nose scratcher?
  • Drinking tube?
  • Red Propeller on top and small vent to make it spin!

Parts List

Part Image
EnviroCare Hoover 3100 replacement HEPA filter
12v squirrel cage blower fan
Foam Gasket
12v battery
Faceplate cut from clear plastic. Source is 2 liter beverage bottle or large pretzel container
inline 3A automotive fuse and holder
Dishwasher drain hose
Airtight nylon kite fabric
clear 2 liter beverage bottle or pretzel container
Aluminum strips (Aluminum Roll Valley Flashing)
14 - #6-32 1/4 inch long machine screws with acorn nuts
needle and thread
elastic (cut from ace bandage, inside bungee cord, old waistband, rubber bands

Assembly

Clamping faceplate to fabric

Faceplate is a piece of clear plastic from a beverage bottle. Step here is to clamp it onto the fabric with some bent pieces of aluminum and machine screw/nut.

Step Image
Drilling hole through faceplate
Screwing clamp into place
Attached faceplate

Attaching blower to filter with gasket

Blower has a circular air-input and the filter has an oval exit. Need adapter gasket to fit the two together in an airtight way.

Step Image
Gasket on filter
Gasket on blower
Gasket between filter and blower

Helmet Construction

Lightweight helmet to offer protection. No need to be airtight due to positive pressure design.

Step Image
Sewing top of helmet
Air exit holes (melted)

Headstrap for stabilization and directing airflow

Headstrap stabilizes helmet position, attaches to air hose at back, and directs airflow to exit at the top sides of the head pointing down.

Step Image
Basic comfortable headstrap design
Attachment for air hose at back
Split airflow 2 or 3 ways
Direction tubes leading to top/front sides

Testing Methodology

  • Measure / monitor particle reduction effectiveness with with a PMS7003 high precision laser dust sensor
    • The PMS7003 only goes down to 0.3 microns, is that good enough?
    • The raw data from the PMS7003 seems to fluctuate a lot. What math should I be doing to summarize?
    • What is a realistic goal for reduction with the filter that will demostrate some protection?
  • Measure / monitor CO2 buildup; using an SGP30 Gas Sensor
    • What levels of CO2 are dangerous?
    • Is testing the design ok or should there be an audible alarm for high levels?
  • Use various harmless substances with a human detectable odor that fit a particle fitler test
    • What harmless substances with a smell exist and what particle sizes do they represent?
  • Battery life / burn in test
    • run on the workbench with a timer
  • Durability testing
    • do various movement exercises while wearing and see what breaks first
    • ok to wear while walking the dog?
    • probably not afe enough to wear it to the grocery store yet as that would risk actual infection?