4.7 Article

PM2.5 elemental composition in indoor residential environments and co-exposure effects on respiratory health in an industrial area

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 216, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2022.114630

Keywords

Source tracers; Chemical fractionation; Infiltration; Indoor air quality; Weighted quantile sum regression; Asthma

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This study aimed to identify and characterize indoor sources of particulate matter (PM) in domestic environments. The study evaluated 74 inhabited apartments in urban and rural areas of Gela, Italy for the elemental composition of PM2.5. The results showed that indoor air in the apartments was affected by both outdoor pollution and specific indoor emission sources, such as soil, industrial sources, heavy oil combustion, cigarette smoke, and use of vacuum dust cleaners. The study also found that cigarette smoke and heavy oil combustion increased health risks.
This study aimed to identify and characterise indoor sources of particulate matter (PM) in domestic environ-ments. 74 inhabited apartments located in the urban area of Gela (Sicily, Italy), close to a refinery, and in three villages of the hinterland were evaluated, in real-world conditions, for the elemental composition of PM2.5. The samples were collected simultaneously inside and outside each apartment for 48 h. In addition, two of the apartments were simultaneously studied for four weeks. The elemental composition of PM2.5 was determined by applying a chemical fractionation procedure followed by inductively-coupled plasma spectrometry analysis, with both optical emission and mass detection. The extractable, more bio-accessible fraction (ext), and the mineralised residual fraction (res) of each element were determined, thus increasing the selectivity of elements as source tracers. Indoor air in the considered apartments was affected by both outdoor pollution and specific indoor emission sources. The behaviour of each source was studied in detail, identifying a reliable tracer: Tires for soil, Asext for industrial sources, Vext for heavy oil combustion, Ce for cigarette smoking and Mo for the use of vacuum dust cleaners. Asext and Vext showed an excellent infiltration capacity, while the concentration of Tires was affected by a low infiltration capacity and by the contribution of particles re-suspension caused by the residents' movements. In the case of Ce and Mo, indoor concentrations were much higher than outdoor with a high variability among the apartments, due to the inhabitants' habits concerning cigarette smoke and use of electric appliances. To test the overall effect of the concomitant exposure to the identified sources on Wh12 M and on DDA, a WQS analysis was conducted. Cigarette smoking and heavily oil combustion driven the Wh12 M odds increase, while the DDA odds increase was mainly driven by heavily oil combustion and the use of vacuum dust cleaners.

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