Atmosphere (Sep 2019)

Regional Inhaled Deposited Dose of Urban Aerosols in an Eastern Mediterranean City

  • Tareq Hussein,
  • Shatha Suleiman Ali Saleh,
  • Vanessa N. dos Santos,
  • Brandon E. Boor,
  • Antti J. Koivisto,
  • Jakob Löndahl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos10090530
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 530

Abstract

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We calculated the regional deposited dose of inhaled particulate matter based on number/mass concentrations in Amman, Jordan. The dose rate was the highest during exercising but was generally lower for females compared to males. The fine particles dose rate was 1010–1011 particles/h (101–102 µg/h). The PM10 dose rate was 49–439 µg/h for males and 36–381 µg/h for females. While resting, the PM10 deposited in the head airways was 67–77% and 8–12% in the tracheobronchial region. When exercising, the head airways received 37–44% of the PM10, whereas the tracheobronchial region received 31–35%. About 8% (exercise) and 14–16% (rest) of the PM2.5 was received in the head airways, whereas the alveolar received 74–76% (exercise) and 54–62% (rest). Extending the results for common exposure scenarios in the city revealed alarming results for service workers and police officers; they might receive PM2.5 and 220 µg/h PM10 while doing their duty on main roads adjacent to traffic. This is especially critical for a pregnant police officer. Outdoor athletic activities (e.g., jogging along main roads) are associated with high PM2.5 and PM10 dose rates (100 µg/h and ~425 µg/h, respectively).

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