Investigation into pedestrian exposure to near-vehicle exhaust emissions.

Environ Health

Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, West Virginia University, Engineering Sciences Building, Evansdale Drive, Morgantown, WV 26506, USA.

Published: March 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inhalation of diesel particulate matter (DPM) can negatively affect health, leading to regulations that limit exposure levels, but pedestrians near vehicles may experience brief high concentrations causing acute health effects.* -
  • Researchers used instruments to measure DPM concentrations at a mannequin's mouth during drive-bys of a diesel truck, estimating the amount inhaled by a pedestrian.* -
  • Results showed that DPM concentrations often exceeded levels known to cause health issues, particularly at stroller height, indicating that even short exposure can pose health risks.*

Article Abstract

Background: Inhalation of diesel particulate matter (DPM) is known to have a negative impact on human health. Consequently, there are regulations and standards that limit the maximum concentrations to which persons may be exposed and the maximum concentrations allowed in the ambient air. However, these standards consider steady exposure over large spatial and time scales. Due to the nature of many vehicle exhaust systems, pedestrians in close proximity to a vehicle's tailpipe may experience events where diesel particulate matter concentrations are high enough to cause acute health effects for brief periods of time.

Methods: In order to quantify these exposure events, instruments which measure specific exhaust constituent concentrations were placed near a roadway and connected to the mouth of a mannequin used as a pedestrian surrogate. By measuring concentrations at the mannequin's mouth during drive-by events with a late model diesel truck, a representative estimate of the exhaust constituent concentrations to which a pedestrian may be exposed was obtained. Typical breathing rates were then multiplied by the measured concentrations to determine the mass of pollutant inhaled.

Results: The average concentration of diesel particulate matter measured over the duration of a single drive-by test often exceeded the low concentrations used in human clinical studies which are known to cause acute health effects. It was also observed that higher concentrations of diesel particulate matter were measured at the height of a stroller than were measured at the mouth of a mannequin.

Conclusion: Diesel particulate matter concentrations during drive-by incidents easily reach or exceed the low concentrations that can cause acute health effects for brief periods of time. For the case of a particularly well-tuned late-model year vehicle, the mass of particulate matter inhaled during a drive-by incident is small compared to the mass inhaled daily at ambient conditions. On a per breath basis, however, the mass of particulate matter inhaled is large compared to the mass inhaled at ambient conditions. Finally, it was determined that children, infants, or people breathing at heights similar to that of a passing vehicle's tailpipe may be exposed to higher concentrations of particulate matter than those breathing at higher locations, such as adults standing up.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673207PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-069X-8-13DOI Listing

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