Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6342051 Atmospheric Environment 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

There is evidence of adverse health impacts from human exposure to traffic-related ultrafine particulate matter pollution. As more commuters are spending a significant portion of their daily routine inside vehicles, it is increasingly relevant to study exposure levels to harmful pollutants inside the vehicle microenvironment. This study is one of the first research efforts to combine detailed freeway traffic data (at 20 s intervals) and in-vehicle ultrafine particulate (UFP) exposure data under varying vehicle ventilation conditions. Results show that due to negative correlation between traffic speed and density, traffic states have a small but significant impact on in-vehicle UFP concentrations, highest in high traffic flow-high speed conditions or in high traffic density-low speed conditions. Vehicle cabin barrier effects are the primary determinant of in-vehicle exposure concentrations, providing 15% protection with the windows down, 47% protection with the windows up and the vent open, and 83-90% protection with the windows up and the vent closed (more with the air conditioning on). Unique results from this study include the dominance of ventilation over traffic effects on UFP and the non-linear relationships between traffic variables and UFP concentrations. The results of this research have important implications for exposure modeling and potential exposure mitigation strategies.

► Vehicle ventilation is the dominant influence on in-vehicle UFP. ► Traffic states have a small but significant impact on in-vehicle UFP. ► Traffic impacts vary by vehicle ventilation and can be non-linear or lagged. ► Individual high-emitters eclipse aggregate traffic flow effects on UFP. ► Congestion per se does not increase in-vehicle UFP exposure concentrations.

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