A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Sidestream tobacco smoke constituents in indoor air modelled in an experimental chamber— Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
AbstractExposure to sidestream tobacco smoke is concerned with constituents in suspension in the indoor atmosphere. The natural dissipation of sidestream tobacco smoke has been investigated in a static atmosphere in a 10 m3 experimental chamber, and the rate of dissipation is expressed as T0.5, the half-life of residence in the air. Respective T0.5 of smoke components are calculated from the various sample data points, assuming a kinetic equation of the first-order process. Sidestream smoke has been generated by a smoking machine according to the Coresta standard protocol and then left to age over an 8-hour period, with subsequent sampling at defined time intervals. The experiments have been repeated over five days, and eight data point samples are obtained for each experiment. Besides nicotine, CO, and smoke particulate matter, interest has been focused on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). The initial concentrations, C0 for smoke particulate matter and nicotine (gas and particulate phases) are found to be 13.8 mg and 92 μg per cigarette per cubic meter, with T0.5 being 2.6 and 2.1 hours, respectively. Low molecular-weight PAH have T0.5 up to 20 hours, explainable only by their high concentrations in the gas phase, while the 3- to 7-ring PAH have T0.5 of about 2 hours. The contribution of CO to ambient concentration is 91 mg per cigarette per cubic meter. The data can be useful in mathematical modellization studies regarding ventilation or exposure to sidestream smoke.
Sidestream tobacco smoke constituents in indoor air modelled in an experimental chamber— Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
AbstractExposure to sidestream tobacco smoke is concerned with constituents in suspension in the indoor atmosphere. The natural dissipation of sidestream tobacco smoke has been investigated in a static atmosphere in a 10 m3 experimental chamber, and the rate of dissipation is expressed as T0.5, the half-life of residence in the air. Respective T0.5 of smoke components are calculated from the various sample data points, assuming a kinetic equation of the first-order process. Sidestream smoke has been generated by a smoking machine according to the Coresta standard protocol and then left to age over an 8-hour period, with subsequent sampling at defined time intervals. The experiments have been repeated over five days, and eight data point samples are obtained for each experiment. Besides nicotine, CO, and smoke particulate matter, interest has been focused on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). The initial concentrations, C0 for smoke particulate matter and nicotine (gas and particulate phases) are found to be 13.8 mg and 92 μg per cigarette per cubic meter, with T0.5 being 2.6 and 2.1 hours, respectively. Low molecular-weight PAH have T0.5 up to 20 hours, explainable only by their high concentrations in the gas phase, while the 3- to 7-ring PAH have T0.5 of about 2 hours. The contribution of CO to ambient concentration is 91 mg per cigarette per cubic meter. The data can be useful in mathematical modellization studies regarding ventilation or exposure to sidestream smoke.
Sidestream tobacco smoke constituents in indoor air modelled in an experimental chamber— Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Vu-Duc, Trinh (author) / Huynh, Cong-Khahn (author)
Environmental International ; 15 ; 57-64
1989-04-04
8 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English