Abstract

With the aim of determining the impacts of various factors on commuter exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5), a series of field studies were carried out to measure commuter exposure to PM2.5 on six major commuting modes (in-cabin mode: bus, taxi and metro; on-roadway mode: walking, bicycle and motorcycle) in a highly industrialized city in the Pearl River Delta, China. The results showed that the exposure level was greatly influenced by the commuter mode, with the on-roadway mode showing a higher PM2.5 concentration (76 μg/m3). An experiment with the taxi mode suggested that the use of air-conditioning can effectively reduce exposure levels in most cases (by at least 83%). Apart from traffic-related emissions, ambient PM2.5 concentration also had important impacts on exposure levels in most commuting modes, which was further ascertained by the seasonal variations in exposure levels and their significant correlations (p < 0.05) with meteorological parameters (temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and direction). The results of a General Linear Model analysis show that temperature, traffic mode and wind speed were significant factors that explained 27.3% of variability for the in-cabin mode, while relative humidity and wind speed were the significant determinants for the on-roadway mode, which contributed 14.1% of variability. In addition, wind direction was also an important determinant for both in-cabin and on-roadway modes. This study has some valuable implications that can help commuters to adopt appropriate travel behavior to reduce their personal exposure to such pollutants.

Highlights

  • The adverse health effects of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) have been identified by recent epidemiological studies

  • The results showed that the exposure level was greatly influenced by the commuter mode, with the onroadway mode showing a higher PM2.5 concentration (76 μg/m3)

  • Inter-Comparison of Commuting Modes Substantial differences of PM2.5 exposure levels existed among six commuting modes in this study (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The adverse health effects of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) have been identified by recent epidemiological studies. Exposure to PM2.5 has been linked to induction of oxidative DNA damage in toxicological studies (Risom et Exposure level in traffic microenvironment is influenced by transportation mode (Briggs et al, 2008; Kaur and Nieuwenhuijsen, 2009; Kingham et al, 2011), air conditioning (A/C) mode (Chan et al, 2002; Chan and Chung, 2003; Esber and El-Fadel, 2008; Geiss et al, 2010; Knibbs et al, 2010) and meteorological parameters Developing countries are facing serious air pollution problems from both industrialization and urbanization processes (Economopoulou and Economopoulos, 2002; Afroz et al, 2003; Wang et al, 2003; Han and Naeher, 2006; Colbeck et al, 2011; Cao et al, 2012), and the traffic microenvironment may be more complicated

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