Abstract

The role of human occupancy as a source of indoor biological aerosols is poorly understood. Size-resolved concentrations of total and biological particles in indoor air were quantified in a classroom under occupied and vacant conditions. Per-occupant emission rates were estimated through a mass-balance modeling approach, and the microbial diversity of indoor and outdoor air during occupancy was determined via rDNA gene sequence analysis. Significant increases of total particle mass and bacterial genome concentrations were observed during the occupied period compared to the vacant case. These increases varied in magnitude with the particle size and ranged from 3 to 68 times for total mass, 12–2700 times for bacterial genomes, and 1.5–5.2 times for fungal genomes. Emission rates per person-hour because of occupancy were 31 mg, 37 × 106 genome copies, and 7.3 × 106 genome copies for total particle mass, bacteria, and fungi, respectively. Of the bacterial emissions, ∼18% are from taxa that are closely associated with the human skin microbiome. This analysis provides size-resolved, per person-hour emission rates for these biological particles and illustrates the extent to which being in an occupied room results in exposure to bacteria that are associated with previous or current human occupants.Practical ImplicationsPresented here are the first size-resolved, per person emission rate estimates of bacterial and fungal genomes for a common occupied indoor space. The marked differences observed between total particle and bacterial size distributions suggest that size-dependent aerosol models that use total particles as a surrogate for microbial particles incorrectly assess the fate of and human exposure to airborne bacteria. The strong signal of human microbiota in airborne particulate matter in an occupied setting demonstrates that the aerosol route can be a source of exposure to microorganisms emitted from the skin, hair, nostrils, and mouths of other occupants.

Highlights

  • Modeling the dynamics of airborne particulate matter is a powerful tool for understanding how building design, occupancy, and operation affect human exposure to airborne particles (Nazaroff and Cass, 1989)

  • Human occupancy was associated with substantially increased airborne concentrations of total particles, bacterial genomes, and equivalent fungal genomes

  • The results provided here represent an early inquiry into the impacts of human occupancy on the type and character of biological aerosols present in indoor air

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Summary

Introduction

Modeling the dynamics of airborne particulate matter is a powerful tool for understanding how building design, occupancy, and operation affect human exposure to airborne particles (Nazaroff and Cass, 1989). In the absence of combustion, cooking, and smoking, evidence indicates that resuspension can be a major source of total airborne particulate matter in occupied indoor environments, thereby suggesting a potentially important emission mechanism for indoor biological particles. The sizeresolved emission rates of bacteria and fungi due to human occupancy of indoor environments have not been reported, which limits modeling efforts to predict the fate and transport of these important components of particulate matter

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