Longitudinal assessment of personal air pollution clouds in ten home and office environments.

Indoor Air

Human-Oriented Built Environment Lab, School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Published: February 2022

Elevated exposure to indoor air pollution is associated with negative human health and well-being outcomes. Inhalation exposure studies commonly rely on stationary monitors in combination with human time-activity patterns; however, this method is susceptible to exposure misclassification. We tracked ten participants during five consecutive workdays with stationary air pollutant monitors at their homes and offices, and wearable personal monitors. Real-time measures of size-resolved particulate matter (within range 0.3-10 μm) and CO , and integrated samples of PM , VOCs, and aldehydes were collected. The PM  cloud magnitude (excess of PM beyond stationary room concentration) was detected for all participants in homes and offices. The PM  cloud magnitude ranged within 5-37 μg/m and was the most discernible in the coarse particle size fraction. Particles associated with "Urban mix," "Traffic," and "Human activities" sources contributed the most to PM exposures. The personal CO  clouds were detected for participants with the SEMs in their living rooms and private or low-occupancy offices. The stationary monitors placed in bedrooms were better predictors of personal PM and CO exposures. An overall of 33 VOCs and aldehydes were detected in both microenvironments, with the majority exhibiting high correlation between personal and stationary stations.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ina.12993DOI Listing

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