| Literature DB >> 26521024 |
Paola Pedata1, Tobias Stoeger2, Ralf Zimmermann3,4, Annette Peters5, Günter Oberdörster6, Andrea D'Anna7.
Abstract
Although mass emissions of combustion-generated particulate matter have been substantially reduced by new combustion technology, there is still a great concern about the emissions of huge numbers of sub-10 nm particles with insignificant mass. These particles have up to orders of magnitude higher surface area to mass ratios compared to larger particles, have surfaces covered with adsorbed volatile and semi-volatile organic species or even are constituted by such species. Currently there is only very little information available on exposure and related health effects specific for smaller particles and first evidences for long-term health effects has only been recently published. However, the fact that these nanoparticles are not easily measured at the exhausts and in the atmosphere and that their biological activity is obscure does not mean that we can overlook them. There is an urgent need to develop i) reliable methods to measure sub-10 nm particles at the exhaust and in the atmosphere and ii) a robust correlation between the chemical structure of the molecules making up combustion-generated nanoparticles and health burden of new combustion technologies. Our attention has to turn to this new class of combustion-generated nanoparticles, which might be the future major constituents of air pollution.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26521024 PMCID: PMC4628326 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-015-0107-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Fig. 1Upper panel: Normalized particle size distribution functions measured in the bluish (full diamond) and in the sooting region of an ethylene-rich/air flame (empty circle), and at the exhaust of a common-rail Diesel engine at half load with (grey triangle) and without (line) a particulate filter (DPF). Flame data adapted from Echavarria et al. [26]. Engine data adapted from D’Anna A. [1] & Gualtieri M. et al. [18]. Lower panel: Normalized particle size distribution functions measured on-road (empty triangles) and in vehicles plumes (gray triangles) or following the vehicle with a “sniffer” laboratory vehicle with (full diamonds) and without (empty circles) a thermodenuder. On-road data adapted from Kittelson et al. [22]; vehicle plumes adapted from Yao et al. [23]; “sniffer” data adapted from Ronkko et al. [4]