Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4443673 Atmospheric Environment 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Coarse particulate matter (PM10-2.5)10-2.5) concentration data from residential outdoor sites were collected using portable samplers as part of an exposure assessment for the North Carolina Asthma and Children's Environment Studies (NC-ACES). PM10-2.510-2.5 values were estimated using the differential between independent PM1010 and PM2.52.5 collocated MiniVol measurements. Repeated daily 24-h integrated PM1010 and PM2.52.5 residential outdoor monitoring was performed at a total of 26 homes during September 2003–June 2004 in the Research Triangle Park, NC area. This effort resulted in the collection of 73 total daily measurements. This assessment was conducted to provide data needed to investigate the association of exposures to coarse particle PM mass concentrations with observed human health effects. Potential instrument bias between the differential MiniVol methodology and a dichotomous sampler were investigated. Results indicated that minimal bias of PM10-2.510-2.5 mass concentration estimates (slope == 0.8, intercept =0.36μg m-3)-3) existed between the dichotomous and differential MiniVol procedures. Residential outdoor PM10-2.510-2.5 mass concentrations were observed to be highly variable across measurement days and ranged from 1.1 to 12.6μg m-3-3 (mean of 5.4μg m-3)-3). An average correlation coefficient of r=0.75r=0.75 existed between residential outdoor PM10-2.510-2.5 mass concentrations and those obtained from the central ambient monitoring site. Temporal and spatial variability of PM10-2.510-2.5 mass concentrations during the study were observed and are described in this report.

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