RESUMEN
UNLABELLED: People spend approximately one-third of their lives sleeping, where they can be exposed to a myriad of particle-bound biological agents and chemical pollutants that originate within mattresses and bedding, including allergens, fungal spores, bacteria, and particle-phase semi-volatile organic compounds. Full-scale particle resuspension experiments were conducted in an environmental chamber, where volunteers performed a prescribed movement routine on an artificially seeded mattress. Human movements in bed, such as rolling from the prone to supine position, were found to resuspend settled particles, leading to elevations in airborne particle concentrations. Resuspension rates were estimated for the size fractions of 1-2 µm, 2-3 µm, 3-5 µm, 5-10 µm, and 10-20 µm, and were in the range of 10(-3) to 10(1) h(-1). Particle size had the most significant impact on the resuspension rate, whereas dust loading, volunteer body mass, and ventilation rate had a much smaller impact. Resuspension increased with the intensity of a movement, as characterized by surface vibrations, and decreased with repeated movement routines. Inhalation exposure was characterized with the intake fraction metric. Intake fractions increased as the particle size and ventilation rate decreased and ranged from 10(2) to 10(4) inhaled particles per million resuspended, demonstrating that a significant fraction of released particles can be inhaled by sleeping occupants. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: Full-scale chamber experiments with human volunteers demonstrate that body movements in bed can resuspend settled particles from mattresses, leading to elevated airborne particle concentrations in both the breathing zone and bulk air of the chamber. Numerous variables influence resuspension, including particle size and intensity of a specific body movement. The results suggest that human-induced resuspension in the sleep microenvironment may play an important role in contributing to our inhalation exposure to mattress dust pollutants.
Asunto(s)
Contaminación del Aire Interior/análisis , Lechos , Material Particulado , Peso Corporal , Humanos , Exposición por Inhalación , Movimiento , Tamaño de la Partícula , VentilaciónRESUMEN
The House Observations of Microbial and Environmental Chemistry (HOMEChem) study is a collaborative field investigation designed to probe how everyday activities influence the emissions, chemical transformations and removal of trace gases and particles in indoor air. Sequential and layered experiments in a research house included cooking, cleaning, variable occupancy, and window-opening. This paper describes the overall design of HOMEChem and presents preliminary case studies investigating the concentrations of reactive trace gases, aerosol particles, and surface films. Cooking was a large source of VOCs, CO2, NOx, and particles. By number, cooking particles were predominantly in the ultrafine mode. Organic aerosol dominated the submicron mass, and, while variable between meals and throughout the cooking process, was dominated by components of hydrocarbon character and low oxygen content, similar to cooking oil. Air exchange in the house ensured that cooking particles were present for only short periods. During unoccupied background intervals, particle concentrations were lower indoors than outdoors. The cooling coils of the house ventilation system induced cyclic changes in water soluble gases. Even during unoccupied periods, concentrations of many organic trace gases were higher indoors than outdoors, consistent with housing materials being potential sources of these compounds to the outdoor environment. Organic material accumulated on indoor surfaces, and exhibited chemical signatures similar to indoor organic aerosol.