Chemistry and human exposure implications of secondary organic aerosol production from indoor terpene ozonolysis.
Colleen Marciel F RosalesJinglin JiangAhmad LahibBrandon P BottorffEmily K ReidyVinay KumarAntonios TasoglouHeinz HuberSebastien DusanterAlexandre TomasBrandon Emil BoorPhilip S StevensPublished in: Science advances (2022)
Surface cleaning using commercial disinfectants, which has recently increased during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, can generate secondary indoor pollutants both in gas and aerosol phases. It can also affect indoor air quality and health, especially for workers repeatedly exposed to disinfectants. Here, we cleaned the floor of a mechanically ventilated office room using a commercial cleaner while concurrently measuring gas-phase precursors, oxidants, radicals, secondary oxidation products, and aerosols in real-time; these were detected within minutes after cleaner application. During cleaning, indoor monoterpene concentrations exceeded outdoor concentrations by two orders of magnitude, increasing the rate of ozonolysis under low (<10 ppb) ozone levels. High number concentrations of freshly nucleated sub-10-nm particles (≥10 5 cm -3 ) resulted in respiratory tract deposited dose rates comparable to or exceeding that of inhalation of vehicle-associated aerosols.
Keyphrases
- particulate matter
- air pollution
- coronavirus disease
- water soluble
- respiratory tract
- health risk
- endothelial cells
- sars cov
- healthcare
- public health
- intensive care unit
- heavy metals
- mental health
- photodynamic therapy
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- room temperature
- health information
- risk assessment
- electron transfer
- ionic liquid