
Jakob Löndahl
Associate Professor / Senior Lecturer

A new method to measure real-world respiratory tract deposition of inhaled ambient black carbon
Author
Summary, in English
In this study, we present the development of a mobile system to measure real-world total respiratory tract deposition of inhaled ambient black carbon (BC). Such information can be used to supplement the existing knowledge on air pollution-related health effects, especially in the regions where the use of standard methods and intricate instrumentation is limited. The study is divided in two parts. Firstly, we present the design of portable system and methodology to evaluate the exhaled air BC content. We demonstrate that under real-world conditions, the proposed system exhibit negligible particle losses, and can additionally be used to determine the minute ventilation. Secondly, exemplary experimental data from the system is presented. A feasibility study was conducted in the city of La Paz, Bolivia. In a pilot experiment, we found that the cumulative total respiratory tract deposition dose over 1-h commuting trip would result in approximately 2.6 μg of BC. This is up to 5 times lower than the values obtained from conjectural approach (e.g. using physical parameters from previously reported worksheets). Measured total respiratory tract deposited BC fraction varied from 39% to 48% during walking and commuting inside a micro-bus, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, no studies focusing on experimental determination of real-world deposition dose of BC have been performed in developing regions. This can be especially important because the BC mass concentration is significant and determines a large fraction of particle mass concentration. In this work, we propose a potential method, recommendations, as well as the limitations in establishing an easy and relatively cheap way to estimate the respiratory tract deposition of BC. In this study we present a novel method to measure real-world respiratory tract deposition dose of Black Carbon. Results from a pilot study in La Paz, Bolivia, are presented.
Department/s
- Ergonomics and Aerosol Technology
Publishing year
2019
Language
English
Pages
295-303
Publication/Series
Environmental Pollution
Volume
248
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Elsevier
Topic
- Environmental Health and Occupational Health
- Respiratory Medicine and Allergy
Keywords
- Air quality
- Black carbon exposure
- Deposition dose
- Inhalation
- Respiratory tract
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0269-7491