Litcius/Paper detail

Personal Exposure to Black Carbon, Particulate Matter and Nitrogen Dioxide in the Paris Region Measured by Portable Sensors Worn by Volunteers

Baptiste Languille, Valérie Gros, N. Bonnaire, Cécile Honoré, Anne Kaufmann, Karine Zeitouni

2022Toxics11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Portable sensors have emerged as a promising solution for personal exposure (PE) measurement. For the first time in Île-de-France, PE to black carbon (BC), particulate matter (PM), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) was quantified based on three field campaigns involving 37 volunteers from the general public wearing the sensors all day long for a week. This successful deployment demonstrated its ability to quantify PE on a large scale, in various environments (from dense urban to suburban, indoor and outdoor) and in all seasons. The impact of the visited environments was investigated. The proximity to road traffic (for BC and NO2), as well as cooking activities and tobacco smoke (for PM), made significant contributions to total exposure (up to 34%, 26%, and 44%, respectively), even though the time spent in these environments was short. Finally, even if ambient outdoor levels played a role in PE, the prominent impact of the different environments suggests that traditional ambient monitoring stations is not a proper surrogate for PE quantification.

Topics & Concepts

ParticulatesNitrogen dioxideCarbon dioxideEnvironmental chemistryCarbon blackEnvironmental scienceNitrogenChemistryNatural rubberOrganic chemistryAir Quality and Health ImpactsAir Quality Monitoring and ForecastingVehicle emissions and performance