Personal black carbon and ultrafine particles exposures among high school students in urban China

Publication date

2020-10

Authors

Zhou, Ying
Shao, Yijun
Yuan, Yue
Liu, Jian
Zou, Xiaoli
Bai, Pinqing
Zhan, Ming
Zhang, Peng
Vlaanderen, JelleISNI 000000039175570X
Vermeulen, RoelORCID 0000-0003-4082-8163ISNI 0000000396780074

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Air pollution is a major public health challenge in the highly urbanized megacities of China. However, knowledge on exposure to ambient unregulated air pollutants such as black carbon (BC) and ultrafine particles (UFP) among the Chinese population, especially among urban high school students who may have highly variable time-activity patterns, is scarce. To address this, the personal exposures to BC and UFP of high school students (aged 17 to 18) in Chengdu, China were measured at 1-min intervals via portable samplers. Monitoring lasted for 2 consecutive 24-h periods with days classified as "school days" or "non-school days". Time-activity diaries and measurements were combined to explore spatial, temporal, and behavioral factors that contribute to different exposure profiles. The overall geometric means of BC and UFP were 3.60 μg/m3 and 1.83 × 104p/cm3, respectively with notable spatiotemporal variation in exposures observed. In general, the household and transport microenvironments were the predominant contributors to total BC (74.5%) and UFP (36.5%) exposure. However, the outdoor public microenvironment was found to have significantly higher overall average levels of BC than the household and transport microenvironments (p < 0.001) while also presenting the greatest exposure dose intensity (EDI - a measure of exposure in a microenvironment in proportion to time spent in that environment) of 4.79. The largest overall average level of UFP occurred in the indoor public microenvironment followed by transport. The outdoor public microenvironment also presented the greatest EDI of UFP (4.17). This study shows notable spatiotemporal variety in exposure patterns and will inform future exposure and population health studies. The high EDI outdoors may mean that health positive activities, such as exercise, may be being undermined by ambient pollution.

Keywords

Personalized exposure monitoring, Black carbon, Ultrafine particles, High school students, Urban China, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities

Citation

Zhou, Y, Shao, Y, Yuan, Y, Liu, J, Zou, X, Bai, P, Zhan, M, Zhang, P, Vlaanderen, J, Vermeulen, R & Downward, G S 2020, 'Personal black carbon and ultrafine particles exposures among high school students in urban China', Environmental Pollution, vol. 265, no. Pt A, 114825, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114825