Chemically Resolved Respiratory Deposition of Ultrafine Particles Characterized by Number Concentration in the Urban Atmosphere

Environ Sci Technol. 2024 Sep 17;58(37):16507-16516. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.4c03279. Epub 2024 Sep 2.

Abstract

Ultrafine particles (UFPs) dominate the atmospheric particles in number concentration, impacting human health and climate change. However, existing studies primarily rely on mass-based approaches, leading to a restricted understanding of the number-based and chemically resolved health effects of atmospheric UFPs. In this study, we utilized a high-mass-resolution single-particle aerosol mass spectrometer to investigate the online chemical composition and number size distribution of ultrafine, fine, and coarse particles during the summertime in urban Shenzhen, China. Human respiratory deposition dose assessments of particles with varying chemical compositions were further conducted by a respiratory deposition model. The results showed that during our observation, particles containing elemental carbon (EC) were the dominant components in UFPs (0.05-0.1 μm). Compared to fine and coarse particles, UFPs can deposit more deeply into the respiratory tract with a daily dose of ∼2.08 ± 0.67 billion particles. Among the deposited UFPs, EC-cluster particles constituted ∼85.7% in number fraction, accounting for a daily number dose of ∼1.78 billion particles, which poses a greater impact on human health. Simultaneously, we found discrepancies in the chemically resolved particle depositions among number-, surface area-, and mass-based approaches, emphasizing the importance of an appropriate metric for particle health-risk evaluation.

Keywords: chemical composition; health effect; respiratory deposition; single-particle mass spectrometry; ultrafine particles.

MeSH terms

  • Aerosols
  • Air Pollutants*
  • Atmosphere* / chemistry
  • China
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Humans
  • Particle Size*
  • Particulate Matter*

Substances

  • Particulate Matter
  • Air Pollutants
  • Aerosols