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Comparison of Measured Particle Lung-Deposited Surface Area Concentrations by an Aerotrak 9000 Using Size Distribution Measurements for a Range of Combustion Aerosols
Authors:Anna Leavey  Jiaxi Fang  Manoranjan Sahu  Pratim Biswas
Affiliation:1. Aerosol and Air Quality Research Laboratory, Department of Energy, Environmental and Chemical Engineering , Washington University in St. Louis , St. Louis , Missouri , USA;2. Advanced Energy Technology Initiative , University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , Champaign , Illinois , USA
Abstract:Surface area in addition to mass concentration is increasingly being emphasized as an important metric representing potential adverse health effects from exposure to inhaled particles. Lung-deposited surface area (SA) concentrations for a variety of aerosols: coal, biomass, cigarette, incense, candle, and TiO2 were measured using an AeroTrak 9000 (TSI Incorporated) and compared with those calculated from number size distributions from a scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS). Three methodologies to compute the SA concentrations using the International Commission on Radiological Protection's (ICRP) Lung Deposition model and an SMPS were compared. The first method calculated the SA from SMPS size distributions, while the second method used lognormal size distribution functions. A third method generated a closed-form equation using the method of moments. All calculated SMPS SA data against which the measured SA data were compared were generated using the first method only; however, the SA concentrations calculated from each of the three methods demonstrated strong correlations with each other. Overall, results between measured and calculated lung-deposited SA indicated strong positive linear associations (R 2 0.78 - >0.99), moderately dependent on the type of aerosol. In all cases, the measured SA concentrations slightly underestimated those calculated from the SMPS data, with the exception of coal combustion particles. Although some dependency on aerosol material exists, the instrument measuring lung-deposited SA demonstrated consistent reliability across a range of concentrations for a range of materials. For optimal results however, applying a correction factor (CF) before taking the instrument to the field is recommended.

Copyright 2013 American Association for Aerosol Research
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