4.7 Article

Bioavailability of elements in atmospheric PM2.5 during winter episodes at Central Eastern European urban background site

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 245, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2020.117993

Keywords

Particulate air pollution; Episodes; Chemical fractionation; Bioavailability; Health risk assessment; Poland

Funding

  1. Polish National Science Centre (Narodowe Centrum Nauki) under OPUS funding Shceme 7th edition [UMO-2014/13/B/ST10/01096]
  2. Faculty of Energy and Environmental Engineering, Silesian University of Technology

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The study in Warsaw, Poland, analyzed the bioavailability and potential risk of trace elements bound to atmospheric PM2.5 during a 40-day winter period. The findings showed that the elements exhibited high bioavailability and risk, with concentrations rising significantly during episodes days, leading to increased health risks for human exposure.
The analysis of bioavailability and potential risk to human health of trace and minor elements bound to atmospheric PM2.5 was carried out at an urban background site in Warsaw, Poland during a 40-day winter period. The samples were sequentially extracted into four different fractions: water soluble (F1), reducible (F2), oxidizable (F3) and residual (F4) for the chemical fractionation of 8 elements: As, Cd, K, Mn, Pb, Sb, Ti and Zn, and further analyzed using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry in each fraction. The average PM2.5 mass concentration of 31.81 mu g/m(3) (+/- 19.73 mu g/m(3)) was exceeding daily WHO air quality guideline, while concentrations rose up to 50-70 mu g/m(3) during episode days. Total concentrations of all analyzed elements were higher during the episode periods, with the highest increases for K, Pb (2 times) and Cd (1.7 times). All elements exhibited high bioavailability, as well as very high (K, Ti, Zn) and high (As, Cd, Mn, Pb, Sb) risk assessment code, with both features rising in episodic days up to 20% and more than 60%, respectively. Cancer risk for adults resulted from inhalation exposure to the most bioavailable fractions (F1 and F2) of human carcinogen As. It was higher than the precautionary criterion (1 . 10(-6)) and increased during the days with elevated PM2.5 levels.

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