Abstract
Particle number (PN) and mass (PM) concentrations were measured in four offices in a HVAC building, one of them corresponding to a printer room. On-line monitoring of the indoor PM concentrations was accompanied with monitoring of the outdoor concentration. In addition, black carbon was measured in two of the selected offices. PN concentrations were measured with a variety of instruments (SMPS,NanoScan, P-Trak) covering a range between 10 nm and 9 μm, whereas PM10 mass concentrations were measured with several DustTraks. Cleaning activities and printing were identified as the most significant indoor sources for ultrafine particles with the latter resulting in a substantial increase of indoor PN 2.5 μm during workdays due to particle resuspension. However, when the offices were not occupied (night, weekend) the outdoor environment was a strong contribution to indoor concentrations. Lastly, black carbon preserved low concentrations in both under study offices and was not associated with printer emissions suggesting that black carbon is not an appropriate measure for assessing printer emissions.
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