| Literature DB >> 31480224 |
Spyros Lampos1, Evangelia Kostenidou2, Konstantinos Farsalinos1, Zoi Zagoriti1, Aristeidis Ntoukas1, Konstantinos Dalamarinis1, Panagiotis Savranakis1, George Lagoumintzis3, Konstantinos Poulas4,5.
Abstract
Cigarette smoke is a complex mixture of chemical compounds which are emitted during the processes of tobacco combustion. Electronic cigarettes (e-cigs) are expected to produce less harmful compounds due to the absence of tobacco leaf combustion. However, potential risks of the passive exposure to the aerosol exhaled by e-cig users have been raised in the last decade. In this study, the aerosols with diameter less than 1 μm (PM1) produced by vaping of various e-cig liquids were compared to those generated by smoking conventional cigarettes in real time. The mass and number concentration along with the number size distribution were measured in a closed room of 35 m3 volume. Our results showed that aerosols emitted from e-cig liquids had a different profile compared to those from conventional cigarettes. Although e-cigs initially produced higher particle mass and number concentrations, their emissions had much shorter lifetime of approximately 10-20 s, in comparison with the conventional and hand-rolling cigarette particulate emissions which had a dissipation time of approximately 1.4 h in a 35 m3 room. E-cigs emitted aerosols which volatilized rapidly, as they probably consisted almost only of propylene glycol and/or vegetable glycerin.Entities:
Keywords: PM1; aerosols; conventional cigarettes; e-cigs; emissions
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480224 PMCID: PMC6789668 DOI: 10.3390/toxics7030045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxics ISSN: 2305-6304
The characteristics of the e-liquids and cigarette types used for the real-time measurements inside the closed room.
| Exp. Number: | e-Liquids/Cigarette Type |
|---|---|
| 1 | 80% PG–20% VG 18 mg/mL nicotine |
| 2 | 50% PG–50% VG 12 mg/mL nicotine |
| 3 | 80% PG–20% VG 12 mg/mL nicotine |
| 4 | 70% PG–30% VG 12 mg/mL nicotine 1 |
| 5 | 20% PG–80% VG without nicotine 1 |
| 6 | Hand-rolling cigarette |
| 7 | Conventional tobacco cigarette |
1 Commercially available e-cigarette liquids. PG: propylene glycol, VG: vegetable glycerin.
Figure 1Time series of PM1 mass concentration as measured from DustTrak (black line) and number concentration as seen by the scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS) (grey line) produced from two e-cig liquids and one conventional cigarette over time (the star indicates that the liquid was generated in the laboratory) during the measurements inside a 35 m3 closed room. The time resolution of the SMPS (3 min) was too long to capture the e-cig emissions.
Figure 2Time series of PM1 mass concentration as measured by DustTrak (black line) and number concentration as seen by the condensation particle counter (CPC) (grey line), produced by four e-cig liquids during the measurements inside a 35 m3 closed room. Independently of the e-cig liquid composition, the emissions reached high levels but they evaporated quite fast within 10–20 s.
Figure 3Number size distributions (a) and volume distributions (b) versus the mobility diameter produced by vaping two different e-cig liquids (black dotted and black dashed line) and by smoking a conventional cigarette (black solid line). The grey solid line represents the aerosol background inside the 35 m3 room. The distributions of the e-cig liquid correspond to the average of the whole vaping period of each e-cig, while the distribution of the conventional cigarette emissions is the average of 30 min after the concentration has reached the maximum value.
Figure 4(a) Time series of PM1 mass concentration and (b) time series of number concentration of commercially available conventional cigarette (black dashed line) and hand-rolling cigarette (grey solid line) inside a 35 m3 closed room. The number size (c) and volume (d) distributions of the emitted particles had similar size ranges.