Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4439468 Atmospheric Environment 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Time–activity patterns are an important determinant of personal exposure to air pollution. This is demonstrated by measuring personal exposure of 16 participants for 7 consecutive days: 8 couples of which one person was a full-time worker and the other was a homemaker; both had a very different time–activity pattern. We used portable aethalometers to measure black carbon levels with a high temporal resolution and a PDA with GPS-logger and electronic diary. The exposure to black carbon differs between partners by up to 30%, although they live at the same location. The activity contributing most to this difference is transport: Average exposure in transport is 6445 ng m−3, followed by exposure during shopping (2584 ng m−3). Average exposure is lowest while sleeping (1153 ng m−3) and when doing home-based activities (1223 ng m−3). Full-time workers spend almost twice as much time in transport as the homemakers. As a result of the study design we measured in several different homes, shops, cars, etc. enabling a better insight in true overall exposure in those microenvironments. Other factors influencing personal exposure are: background concentrations and location of residence in an urban, suburban or rural environment.

► Personal exposure monitoring with a high temporal resolution. ► Time–activity patterns are a key determinant of personal exposure to air pollution. ► Exposure between partners, living at the same address, can differ by up to 30%. ► Exposure while in transport far exceeds exposure in other microenvironments. ► This research underlines the importance of personal monitoring for health purposes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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