Abstract

Abstract The American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) and the International Standards Organization (ISO) have both recently proposed similar sets of particulate sampling criteria. The criteria describe sample device collection efficiency, as a function of particle size, for inspirable, thoracic, and respirable particulate mass. The collection efficiency curves do not match the lung deposition curves at all particle sizes which leads to a bias between measured particulate (exposure) and deposited particulate (dose). This bias, as a function of particle size distribution, was examined for both the ACGIH and ISO proposed curves. Results indicate that the amount of bias varies with both geometric mean (mass median aerodynamic diameter) and geometric standard deviation. Thus, there will be a different exposure-dose relationship and exposure-response relationship for each particle size distribution. This can lead to additional variability in exposure-response analyses unless all members...

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