The impact of particle filtration on indoor air quality in a classroom near a highway

Publication date

2017-03-01

Authors

van der Zee, Saskia C
Strak, Maciej
Dijkema, Marieke B A
Brunekreef, BertISNI 0000000029543122
Janssen, Nicole A H

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Article
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Abstract

A pilot study was performed to investigate whether the application of a new mechanical ventilation system with a fine F8 (MERV14) filter could improve indoor air quality in a high school near the Amsterdam ring road. PM10, PM2.5 and black carbon (BC) concentrations were measured continuously inside an occupied intervention classroom and outside the school during three sampling periods in the winter of 2013/2014. Initially, three weeks of baseline measurements were performed, with the existing ventilation system and normal ventilation habits. Next, an intervention study was performed. A new ventilation system was installed in the classroom, and measurements were performed during 8 school weeks, in alternating 2-week periods with and without the filter in the ventilation system under otherwise identical ventilation conditions. Indoor/outdoor ratios measured during the weeks with filter were compared with those measured without filter to evaluate the ability of the F8 filter to improve indoor air quality. During teaching hours, the filter reduced BC exposure by, on average, 36%. For PM10 and PM2.5, a reduction of 34% and 30% was found, respectively. This implies that application of a fine filter can reduce the exposure of schoolchildren to traffic exhaust at hot spot locations by about one-third. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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van der Zee, S C, Strak, M, Dijkema, M B A, Brunekreef, B & Janssen, N A H 2017, 'The impact of particle filtration on indoor air quality in a classroom near a highway', Indoor Air, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 291-302. https://doi.org/10.1111/ina.12308