• Title of article

    Intake fraction of PM2.5 and NOX from vehicle emissions in Beijing based on personal exposure data

  • Author/Authors

    Du، نويسنده , , Xuan and Wu، نويسنده , , Ye-Wei Fu، نويسنده , , Lixin and Wang، نويسنده , , Shuxiao and Zhang، نويسنده , , Shaojun and Hao، نويسنده , , Jiming، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    233
  • To page
    243
  • Abstract
    The intake fraction (iF) is the portion of attributable population intake of a source emissions, and is used to link pollutant emissions and population exposure. This study is the first work that reported individual intake fraction of PM2.5 and NOX from vehicle emissions based on personal exposure data in China. We employed PM2.5 and NOX measurement data from 24-h personal exposure sampling and concentration monitoring in traffic environments in the urban area of Beijing to estimate the individual intake fraction (iFi). iFi distributions are presented in microenvironments (traffic, work, home) for adults and children. The individual results are used to calculate the intake fraction for the children group and the adults group in the urban area of Beijing. The iF of PM2.5 for the whole population of these two groups in Beijing is 153 per million, which is significantly higher than those estimates in the United States (1–50 per million) and Mexico (23–120 per million). The iF of NOX is 70 per million, among which the intake in the traffic micro-environment ranks first compared to the iF in the home and office due to a high accumulation of NOX concentration in vehicles. PM2.5 and NOX intake fraction values from vehicle emissions in this study are from at least several times to one order of magnitude higher than those from other industry sources in China. This strongly suggests the health risk from vehicle emissions is significantly higher. Therefore, to protect human health, especially for the large number of people living in the cities of China, controlling vehicle emissions should be the highest priority.
  • Keywords
    PM2.5 , NOX , Personal exposure , vehicle emissions , Individual intake fraction
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Environment
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Environment
  • Record number

    2239779