改进了小体积颗粒物样品的源分配和形态分析。

James J Schauer, Brian J Majestic, Rebecca J Sheesley, Martin M Shafer, Jeffrey T Deminter, Mark Mieritz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

开发并演示了表征大气颗粒物*样品的新化学分析方法,以便扩大此类方法的数量,用于今后涉及颗粒物的健康研究。开发了三套方法,用于分析(1)小体积个人暴露样品中的有机示踪化合物(用于来源解析),(2)小体积个人暴露样品中的微量金属和其他微量元素,(3)PM样品中水溶性铁(Fe),锰(Mn)和铬(Cr)的氧化态形态。第二套方法的发展建立在项目小组以前的工作基础上,该小组过去在大气源分配研究中使用了类似的方法。将这些方法应用于个人暴露样本分析的主要挑战是提高检测限(DLs)和控制可能损害个人暴露样本的低水平污染。我们开发工作的第二个目标是降低这三套方法的成本和复杂性,以帮助它们在未来的健康研究中得到更广泛的应用。该项目的目标已经实现,通过进行两项试点研究,证明了将这些方法纳入现有健康研究的能力。第一项研究涉及对收集的大小分辨的PM样品中的微量元素进行分析,这些样品代表了研究对象的个人暴露情况,同时测量了室内和室外PM浓度。第二项研究涉及分析个人暴露样本、室内样本和室外样本中有机示踪化合物的形态,以了解在职业环境中不同工作类别的研究对象的柴油PM暴露。两项试点研究都使用了来自。大型多年健康研究旨在证明使用新的化学分析方法更好地表征个人接触样本的可行性和价值。健康数据的分析和暴露评估的更广泛影响没有作为本研究的一部分进行评估,但我们的试点研究测量预计将有助于研究者在未来的大型多年健康研究中进行分析。我们开发的低成本测量大气PM样品中Fe、Mn和Cr氧化态的方法非常敏感,非常适合用于健康研究。为了证明这些方法的实用性,开展了小规模研究,在大气从污染源到个人接触的时间尺度上表征PM中Fe的氧化还原循环,并提供有关选定城市环境中目标金属可溶形式的大气浓度的初步数据(以便帮助今后的研究集中精力,以了解金属在人体暴露于PM中的作用及其对健康的不利影响)。本报告总结了已开发并证明适合用于健康研究的方法,并提供了可用于制定假设和实验策略的中试规模数据,以进一步增强未来健康研究的能力,阐明已观察到的大气中PM与不利人类健康结果之间的关联中PM、PM来源和PM成分的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Improved source apportionment and speciation of low-volume particulate matter samples.

New chemical analysis methods for the characterization of atmospheric particulate matter (PM)* samples were developed and demonstrated in order to expand the number of such methods for use in future health studies involving PM. Three sets of methods were, developed, for the analysis (1) of organic tracer compounds in low-volume personal exposure samples (for source apportionment), (2) of trace metals and other trace elements in low-volume personal exposure samples, and (3) of the speciation of the oxidation states of water-soluble iron (Fe), manganese (Mn), and chromium (Cr) in PM samples. The development of the second set of methods built on previous work by the project team, which had in the past used similar methods in atmospheric source apportionment studies. The principal challenges in adapting these methods to the analysis of personal exposure samples were the improvement of detection limits (DLs) and control of the low-level contamination that can compromise personal exposure samples. A secondary goal of our development efforts was to reduce the cost and complexity of the three sets of methods in order to help facilitate their broader use in future health studies. The goals of the project were achieved, and the ability to integrate the methods into existing health studies was demonstrated by way of conducting two pilot studies. The first study involved analysis of trace elements in size-resolved PM samples that had been collected to represent study subjects' personal exposures along with simultaneous measures of indoor and outdoor PM concentrations. The second study involved analysis of the speciation of organic tracer compounds in personal exposure samples, indoor samples, and outdoor samples in order to understand the diesel PM exposure of study subjects in various job classifications in an occupational setting. Both pilot studies used existing samples from. large multi-year health studies and were intended to demonstrate the feasibility and value of using the new chemical analysis methods to better characterize the personal exposure samples. Analysis of the health data and the broader implications of the exposure assessments were not evaluated as part of the present study, but our pilot-study measurements are expected to contribute to investigators' future analyses in the large multi-year health studies. The methods we developed for the low-cost measurement of the oxidation states of Fe, Mn, and Cr in atmospheric PM samples are extremely sensitive and well suited for use in health studies. To demonstrate the utility of these methods, small-scale studies were conducted to characterize the redox cycling of Fe in PM on the time scale of atmospheric transport from source to personal exposure and to provide preliminary data on the atmospheric concentrations of soluble forms of the target metals in selected urban environments (in order to help focus future research seeking to understand the role of metals in human exposure to PM and its adverse health effects). The present report summarizes the methods that were developed and demonstrated to be suitable for use in health studies and provides pilot-scale data that can be used to develop hypotheses and experimental strategies to further enhance the ability of future health studies to elucidate the role of PM, PM sources, and PM components in the observed associations between atmospheric PM and adverse human health outcomes.

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