Literature DB >> 12756011

How do the indoor size distributions of airborne submicron and ultrafine particles in the absence of significant indoor sources depend on outdoor distributions?

U Franck1, O Herbarth, B Wehner, A Wiedensohler, M Manjarrez.   

Abstract

Although almost all epidemiological studies of smaller airborne particles only consider outdoor concentrations, people in Central Europe actually spend most of their time indoors. Yet indoor pollutants such as organic gases, allergens and dust are known to play a prominent role, often affecting human health more than outdoor ones. The aim of this study was to ascertain how the indoor particle size distributions of submicron and ultrafine particles correlate with the outdoor concentrations in the absence of significant indoor sources. A typical indoor particle size distribution pattern has one or two modes. In the absence of significant indoor activities such as smoking, cooking etc., outdoor particles were found to be a very important source of indoor particles. The study shows that in the absence of significant indoor sources, the number of indoor concentrations of particles in this size range are clearly lower than the outdoor concentrations. This difference is greater, the higher the number of outdoor concentrations. However, the drop in concentration is not uniform, with the decrease in concentration of smaller particles exceeding that of larger ones. By contrast, the findings with larger particle sizes (diameter > 1 microm) exhibit rather linear concentration decreases. The non-uniform drop in the number of concentrations from outdoors to indoors in our measurements considering smaller particles ( >0.01 microm) is accompanied by a shift of the concentration maxima to larger particle diameters.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12756011     DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0668.2003.00177.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Indoor Air        ISSN: 0905-6947            Impact factor:   5.770


  8 in total

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4.  Characterization of particle number concentrations and PM2.5 in a school: influence of outdoor air pollution on indoor air.

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6.  Personal exposure to ultrafine particles and oxidative DNA damage.

Authors:  Peter S Vinzents; Peter Møller; Mette Sørensen; Lisbeth E Knudsen; Ole Hertel; Finn Palmgren Jensen; Bente Schibye; Steffen Loft
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Review 7.  Exposure assessment for atmospheric ultrafine particles (UFPs) and implications in epidemiologic research.

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Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2018-01-30       Impact factor: 14.650

  8 in total

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