Simultaneous airborne chrysotile asbestos fibre samples were collected with three types of instruments, namely, the konimeter, the thermal precipitator and the membrane filter, in four asbestos plants (textile manufacturing, asbestos cement production, mining, milling). Linear regression analyses were performed of the membrane filter on the konimeter and thermal precipitator count concentrations, respectively. Sampling was performed at 24-35 locations in each of the processes studied. In order to linearize the relationships and to stabilize the sample variances the data were transformed using the transformation ln(x+1) for both the predictor and the response variables. Eight linear regression equations were developed. The slope coefficients of regressions differed significantly (P < 0.05 or < 0.01) between all the asbestos processes except for the differences of coefficients in mining and milling (P > 0.05). It is concluded that no single conversion factor can be used to reliably convert the konimeter or thermal precipitator to membrane filter asbestos fibre concentrations; a separate conversion factor must be derived for each technological process. In this case the confidence limits of estimates are acceptable for practical occupational hygiene purposes.
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Environ Monit Assess
January 2025
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
This work examines the impact of the electrification of the Holon-Bat Yam passenger train line (central Israel) on air pollutant concentrations using data collected from air quality monitoring stations that operated at the train stations across the electrified train line. We present statistically significant reduction in the annual average NO, NO and NO concentrations (29-45%, 79-85% and 65-75%, respectively), attributed to the electrification of the passenger train line. The drop in the NO and NO concentrations was much stronger than in the NO concentrations, since NO is the main nitrogen species emitted by diesel locomotives.
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Department of Environmental Health, University of Fukui School of Medical Science, Eiheiji, Fukui, Japan.
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