Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications

An experimental assessment of personal exposure to PM10 in 59 office workers was carried out in Dublin; Ireland. Two hundred and fifty five samples of 24 hour personal exposure were collected in real time over a 28 month period. The investigation included an assessment of the uptake of pollutants in...

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Main Authors: Andrew McCreddin, Laurence Gill, Brian Broderick, Aonghus McNabola
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-12-01
Series:Toxics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2305-6304/1/1/60
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spelling doaj-f799dcb373ca49b6a7d0d822da3a375c2020-11-24T20:52:57ZengMDPI AGToxics2305-63042013-12-0111607610.3390/toxics1010060toxics1010060Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and ImplicationsAndrew McCreddin0Laurence Gill1Brian Broderick2Aonghus McNabola3Dept of Civil, Structural & Environmental Engineering, Trinity College, Dublin, IrelandDept of Civil, Structural & Environmental Engineering, Trinity College, Dublin, IrelandDept of Civil, Structural & Environmental Engineering, Trinity College, Dublin, IrelandDept of Civil, Structural & Environmental Engineering, Trinity College, Dublin, IrelandAn experimental assessment of personal exposure to PM10 in 59 office workers was carried out in Dublin; Ireland. Two hundred and fifty five samples of 24 hour personal exposure were collected in real time over a 28 month period. The investigation included an assessment of the uptake of pollutants in the lungs during various daily activities using a Human Respiratory Tract Model. The results of the investigation showed that indoor air quality was the overriding determinant of average daily personal exposure as participants in the study spent over 92% of their time indoors. Exposure in the workplace and exposure at home were the most important microenvironments in total uptake of particulate matter. Exposure while commuting or shopping were found to play a minor role in comparison. The investigation highlighted the importance of considering pollutant uptake as well as personal exposure among receptors where variations in levels of physical activity and duration of exposure are present.http://www.mdpi.com/2305-6304/1/1/60air pollutionPM10personal exposureactivity patternsuptakeindoor air quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew McCreddin
Laurence Gill
Brian Broderick
Aonghus McNabola
spellingShingle Andrew McCreddin
Laurence Gill
Brian Broderick
Aonghus McNabola
Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
Toxics
air pollution
PM10
personal exposure
activity patterns
uptake
indoor air quality
author_facet Andrew McCreddin
Laurence Gill
Brian Broderick
Aonghus McNabola
author_sort Andrew McCreddin
title Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
title_short Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
title_full Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
title_fullStr Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
title_full_unstemmed Personal Exposure to Air Pollution in Office Workers in Ireland: Measurement, Analysis and Implications
title_sort personal exposure to air pollution in office workers in ireland: measurement, analysis and implications
publisher MDPI AG
series Toxics
issn 2305-6304
publishDate 2013-12-01
description An experimental assessment of personal exposure to PM10 in 59 office workers was carried out in Dublin; Ireland. Two hundred and fifty five samples of 24 hour personal exposure were collected in real time over a 28 month period. The investigation included an assessment of the uptake of pollutants in the lungs during various daily activities using a Human Respiratory Tract Model. The results of the investigation showed that indoor air quality was the overriding determinant of average daily personal exposure as participants in the study spent over 92% of their time indoors. Exposure in the workplace and exposure at home were the most important microenvironments in total uptake of particulate matter. Exposure while commuting or shopping were found to play a minor role in comparison. The investigation highlighted the importance of considering pollutant uptake as well as personal exposure among receptors where variations in levels of physical activity and duration of exposure are present.
topic air pollution
PM10
personal exposure
activity patterns
uptake
indoor air quality
url http://www.mdpi.com/2305-6304/1/1/60
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