Litcius/Paper detail

Electric charge of atmospheric nanoparticles and its potential implications with human health

Pablo Fdez-Arróyabe, Ciro Salcines, Pavlos Kassomenos, Ana Santurtún, Tuukka Petäjä

2021The Science of The Total Environment15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This research presents a pilot project developed within the framework of the COST Action 15,211 in which atmospheric nanoparticles were measured in July 2018, in a maritime environment in the city of Santander in Northern Spain. ELPI® + (Electrical Low-Pressure Impactor) was used to measure nanoparticle properties (electric charge, number, size distribution and surface area) from 6 nm to 10,000 nm with 14 size channels. This study focused on the range between 6 and 380 nm. It considered atmospheric nanoparticle electric charge with surface area, deposited and number by size distribution at human respiratory tract regions in a standard person in Santander according to the human respiratory tract model of ICRP 94. An empirical distribution of nanoparticles deposited in the human respiratory tract model and its electric charge is presented for the city of Santander as the main output. Percentages of total and regional deposition in human respiratory tract model were calculated for the Atlantic climate. Nanoparticles have shown an alveolar surface area deposition plateau with a size distribution range between 6 nm to 150 nm. Negative charge of nanoparticles was clearly associated with primary atmospheric nanoparticles being mainly deposited in the alveolar region where a Brownian mechanism of deposition is predominant. We can demonstrate that electric charge may be a key element in explaining Brownian deposition of the smallest particles in the human respiratory tract and that it can be linked to theoretical positive and negative impacts on human health according to several biometeorological studies. To support our analysis, aerosol samples were characterized with transmission electron microscopy and Confocal Raman spectrometer to determinate morphology, size, chemical composition, and structure. The toxicological effects of the samples with the alveolar surface area had a greater deposition, remain to be studied.

Topics & Concepts

AerosolNanoparticleDeposition (geology)Surface chargeRange (aeronautics)Electric chargeElectric fieldNanotechnologyEnvironmental scienceMaterials scienceChemistryMeteorologyPhysicsGeologyComposite materialGeomorphologyPhysical chemistryQuantum mechanicsSedimentAir Quality and Health ImpactsAir Quality Monitoring and ForecastingAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols