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Particle lung deposited surface area (LDSASUPal/SUP) size distributions in different urban environments and geographical regions: Towards understanding of the PMsub2.5/sub dose-response

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    0581417 - ÚCHP 2024 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
    Lepistö, T. - Lintusaari, H. - Oudin, A. - Barreira, L.M.F. - Niemi, J. - Karjalainen, P. - Salo, L. - Silvonen, V. - Markkula, L. - Hoivala, J. - Marjanen, P. - Martikainen, J. - Aurela, M. - Reyes, F.R. - Oyola, P. - Kuuluvainen, H. - Manninen, H.E. - Schins, R.P.F. - Vojtíšek-Lom, M. - Ondráček, Jakub - Topinka, Jan - Timonen, H. - Jalava, P. - Saarikoski, S. - Rönkkö, T.
    Particle lung deposited surface area (LDSASUPal/SUP) size distributions in different urban environments and geographical regions: Towards understanding of the PMsub2.5/sub dose-response.
    Environment International. Roč. 180, OCT 2023 (2023), č. článku 108224. ISSN 0160-4120. E-ISSN 1873-6750
    EU Projects: European Commission(FI) 814978 - TUBE
    Grant - others:BF(FI) 530/31/ 2019; AF(FI) 322120; AFF(FI) 337552; AFF(FI) 337551
    Institutional support: RVO:67985858 ; RVO:68378041
    Keywords : air-pollution * ultrafine particles * black carbon * chemical-composition
    OECD category: Environmental sciences (social aspects to be 5.7); Public and environmental health (UEM-P)
    Impact factor: 11.8, year: 2022
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016041202300497X?via%3Dihub

    Recent studies indicate that monitoring only fine particulate matter (PM2.5) may not be enough to understand and tackle the health risk caused by particulate pollution. Health effects per unit PM2.5 seem to increase in countries with low PM2.5, but also near local pollution sources (e.g., traffic) within cities. The aim of this study is to understand the differences in the characteristics of lung-depositing particles in different geographical regions and urban environments. Particle lung deposited surface area (LDSA(al)) concentrations and size distributions, along with PM2.5, were compared with ambient measurement data from Finland, Germany, Czechia, Chile, and India, covering traffic sites, residential areas, airports, shipping, and industrial sites. In Finland (low PM2.5), LDSAal size distributions depended significantly on the urban environment and were mainly attributable to ultrafine particles (<100 nm). In Central Europe (moderate PM2.5), LDSA(al )was also dependent on the urban environment, but furthermore heavily influenced by the regional aerosol. In Chile and India (high PM2.5), LDSA(al ) was mostly contributed by the regional aerosol despite that the measurements were done at busy traffic sites. The results indicate that the characteristics of lung-depositing particles vary significantly both within cities and between geographical regions. In addition, ratio between LDSA(al )and PM2.5 depended notably on the environment and the country, suggesting that LDSA(al ) exposure per unit PM2.5 may be multiple times higher in areas having low PM2.5 compared to areas with continuously high PM2.5. These findings may partly explain why PM(2.5)seems more toxic near local pollution sources and in areas with low PM(2.5)5. Furthermore, performance of a typical sensor based LDSA(al ) measurement is discussed and a new LDSA(2.5)(al ) notation indicating deposition region and particle size range is introduced. Overall, the study emphasizes the need for country-specific emission mitigation strategies, and the potential of LDSA(al ) concentration as a health-relevant pollution metric.
    Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0349691

     
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