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Publicly Available Published by De Gruyter January 1, 2009

Human exposure to traffic pollution. Experience from Danish studies

  • Ole Hertel , Steen Solvang Jensen , Helle Vibeke Andersen , Finn Palmgren , Peter Wåhlin , Henrik Skov , Ivan Vejsgaard Nielsen , Mette Sørensen , Steffen Loft and Ole Raaschou-Nielsen

Abstract

Air pollution may have severe long-term as well as short-term health effects. The determination of possible links between pollution levels and impact on human health is, however, not a straightforward task. A key problem is the assessment of human exposure to ambient pollution levels. In later years, the possible role of particulate pollution as a health hazard has drawn major attention and is, therefore, the subject of research projects in many countries including Denmark. The present paper gives a review of recent and ongoing/planned Danish air pollution exposure studies. Furthermore, key results from Danish studies of ultrafine particles from urban traffic are outlined. The exposure studies show that air pollution models may be strong tools in impact assessment studies, especially when used in combination with personal exposure monitoring and application of biomarkers. Personal exposure measurements in Copenhagen indicate that indoor pollution levels may be very important for the personal exposure to fine fraction particles (PM2.5). Measurements with a differential mobility analyzer (DMA) in Danish urban areas show that number concentrations of ultrafine particles (<100 nm) in busy streets are strongly correlated with classic traffic pollutants such as nitrogen oxides and carbon monoxide. The number concentrations in urban Danish streets have decreased considerably between two campaigns in 1999 and 2000, apparently as a result of reductions in sulfur contents in Danish diesel fuels that took place in July 1999.


Conference

International Symposium on Green Chemistry, Delhi, India, 2001-01-10–2001-01-13


Published Online: 2009-01-01
Published in Print: 2001-01-01

© 2013 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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