Plug-in fragrance diffusers are one of myriad volatile organic compound-containing consumer products that are commonly found in homes. The perturbing effects of using a commercial diffuser indoors were evaluated using a study group of 60 homes in Ashford, UK. Air samples were taken over 3 day periods with the diffuser switched on and in a parallel set of control homes where it was off. At least four measurements were taken in each home using vacuum-release into 6 L silica-coated canisters and with >40 VOCs quantified using gas chromatography with FID and MS (GC-FID-QMS). Occupants self-reported their use of other VOC-containing products. The variability between homes was very high with the 72 hour sum of all measured VOCs ranging between 30 and >5000 μg m, dominated by /i-butane, propane, and ethanol. For those homes in the lowest quartile of air exchange rate (identified using CO and TVOC sensors as proxies) the use of a diffuser led to a statistically significant increase (-value < 0.02) in the summed concentration of detectable fragrance VOCs and some individual species, alpha pinene rising from a median of 9 μg m to 15 μg m (-value < 0.02). The observed increments were broadly in line with model-calculated estimates based on fragrance weight loss, room sizes and air exchange rates.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2em00444eDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plug-in fragrance
8
fragrance diffusers
8
air exchange
8
-value 002
8
homes
5
impact plug-in
4
fragrance
4
diffusers residential
4
residential indoor
4
indoor voc
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!