Contrasting Chemical Complexity and the Reactive Organic Carbon Budget of Indoor and Outdoor Air.
James M MattilaCaleb ArataAndrew AbeleiraYong ZhouChen WangErin F KatzAllen H GoldsteinJonathan P D AbbattPeter F DeCarloMarina E VanceDelphine K FarmerPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2021)
Reactive organic carbon (ROC) comprises a substantial fraction of the total atmospheric carbon budget. Emissions of ROC fuel atmospheric oxidation chemistry to produce secondary pollutants including ozone, carbon dioxide, and particulate matter. Compared to the outdoor atmosphere, the indoor organic carbon budget is comparatively understudied. We characterized indoor ROC in a test house during unoccupied, cooking, and cleaning scenarios using various online mass spectrometry and gas chromatography measurements of gaseous and particulate organics. Cooking greatly impacted indoor ROC concentrations and bulk physicochemical properties (e.g., volatility and oxidation state), while cleaning yielded relatively insubstantial changes. Additionally, cooking enhanced the reactivities of hydroxyl radicals and ozone toward indoor ROC. We observed consistently higher median ROC concentrations indoors (≥223 μg C m -3 ) compared to outdoors (54 μg C m -3 ), demonstrating that buildings can be a net source of reactive carbon to the outdoor atmosphere, following its removal by ventilation. We estimate the unoccupied test house emitted 0.7 g C day -1 from ROC to outdoors. Indoor ROC emissions may thus play an important role in air quality and secondary pollutant formation outdoors, particularly in urban and suburban areas, and indoors during the use of oxidant-generating air purifiers.
Keyphrases
- particulate matter
- air pollution
- mass spectrometry
- gas chromatography
- carbon dioxide
- hydrogen peroxide
- healthcare
- social media
- liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- heavy metals
- intensive care unit
- risk assessment
- mechanical ventilation
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- health information
- simultaneous determination