Children's exposure to BC and PM pollution, and respiratory tract deposits during commuting trips to school.

Autor: Gao, Jingwen1 (AUTHOR), Qiu, Zhaowen1 (AUTHOR) qzw@chd.edu.cn, Cheng, Wen2 (AUTHOR), Gao, H.Oliver3 (AUTHOR)
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecotoxicology & Environmental Safety. Mar2022, Vol. 232, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Abstrakt: Although children have been identified as a vulnerable group highly susceptible to traffic-related air pollution, their exposure during school commutes to traffic-related pollutants and the relevant health impact is rarely studied. In this study, we measured black carbon (BC) and particulate matter (PM: PM 1 , PM 2.5 , and PM 10) concentrations that children are exposed to during their multi-modal (walking, private cars, and e-bikes) commuting trips to schools in Xi'an, China. A multi-parameter inhalation rate assessment model was developed in combination with the Multi-Path Particle Dosimetry (MPPD) model to quantify the deposition dose in different parts of children's respiratory system (head, tracheobronchial (TB), pulmonary (PUL)). Results show that walking to school exposed children to the lowest PM 1 , PM 2.5 , and BC concentrations, whereas riding an e-bike led to significantly elevated exposure to PM 1 and BC than the other two modes. This is due to children's closer proximity to vehicle tail pipe emissions when they bike to school on road or roadside. The PM and BC concentrations showed remarkable increases in comparison to background concentrations during children's school commutes. Urban background (UB) concentration, traffic volume (TV), time of day, and meteorological parameters could influence a child's personal exposure, and the impact of each factor vary across different transportation modes. Particle size of the pollutant affects its deposition site in the respiratory system. Deposition fractions (DFs) and deposition doses in the head region (DF > 50%) were the highest for PM and BC, for which fine particles (BC, PM 1 , and PM 2.5) were then most easily deposited in the PUL region while coarse particles rarely reach PUL. Children inhaled higher doses of polluted air during active commuting (walking) than passive commuting (private cars, e-bikes), due to longer times of exposure coupled with more active breathing. [Display omitted] • Children are exposed to more PM and BC on an e-bike than other commuting modes. • The significance of influence factors differed among the three commuting modes. • Pollutant particle size determined its deposition site in the respiratory system. • The deposition doses by walking were higher than private cars and e-bikes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE