Literature DB >> 22549723

New approach for particulate exposure monitoring: determination of inhaled particulate mass by 24 h real-time personal exposure monitoring.

Chungsik Yoon1, Kyongnam Ryu, Junghyun Kim, Kiyoung Lee, Donguk Park.   

Abstract

The objectives of this study were to measure particulate pollution (PM(10), PM(2.5), and PM(1.0)) continuously (24 h/day for 7 day) using real-time exposure monitoring and to estimate total inhalation mass using breathing rate and time-activity. Breathing rates were calculated from measured heart rates. Participants were asked to record a time-activity diary every 15 min. Five microenvironments were defined based on the time-activity diary: home, workplace/school, other indoor, outdoor, and transportation. The average masses of inhaled PM(10) were 530, 316, and 280 μg/day for two office workers, a housewife, and three students, respectively; those of PM(2.5) were 316, 279, and 210 μg/day; and those of PM(1.0) were 251, 264, and 187 μg/day, respectively. We found that home and office/school microenvironments were the main contributors of PM(10), PM(2.5), and PM(1.0) inhaled mass during weekdays and weekends because dwelling time was a determinant factor for inhaled mass. Considering microenvironmental concentration, breathing rate, and dwelling time in each microenvironment, indoor home microenvironments were the largest source of particulate inhalation, followed in order by workplace, transportation, other indoor, and outdoor microenvironments. 34.6% and 69.6% of PM(10) inhalation mass were accumulated in home microenvironments during weekdays and weekends, respectively. The inhaled mass of particulate <1.0 μm (PM(1.0)) in size occupied largest, followed in order by particulate 10-2.5 μm (coarse particle) and 2.5-1.0 μm in size for all occupations.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22549723     DOI: 10.1038/jes.2012.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol        ISSN: 1559-0631            Impact factor:   5.563


  1 in total

1.  Prenatal Particulate Matter/Tobacco Smoke Increases Infants' Respiratory Infections: COCOA Study.

Authors:  Song I Yang; Byoung Ju Kim; So Yeon Lee; Hyo Bin Kim; Cheol Min Lee; Jinho Yu; Mi Jin Kang; Ho Sung Yu; Eun Lee; Young Ho Jung; Hyung Young Kim; Ju Hee Seo; Ji Won Kwon; Dae Jin Song; Gwangcheon Jang; Woo Kyung Kim; Jung Yeon Shim; Soo Young Lee; Hyeon Jong Yang; Dong In Suh; Seo Ah Hong; Kil Yong Choi; Youn Ho Shin; Kangmo Ahn; Kyung Won Kim; Eun Jin Kim; Soo Jong Hong
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Immunol Res       Date:  2015-06-25       Impact factor: 5.764

  1 in total

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