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On the Redox-Activity and Health-Effects of Atmospheric Primary and Secondary Aerosol: Phenomenology.

Authors :
Costabile, Francesca
Decesari, Stefano
Vecchi, Roberta
Lucarelli, Franco
Curci, Gabriele
Massabò, Dario
Rinaldi, Matteo
Gualtieri, Maurizio
Corsini, Emanuela
Menegola, Elena
Canepari, Silvia
Massimi, Lorenzo
Argentini, Stefania
Busetto, Maurizio
Di Iulio, Gianluca
Di Liberto, Luca
Paglione, Marco
Petenko, Igor
Russo, Mara
Marinoni, Angela
Source :
Atmosphere; May2022, Vol. 13 Issue 5, p704, 30p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The RHAPS (Redox-Activity And Health-Effects Of Atmospheric Primary And Secondary Aerosol) project was launched in 2019 with the major objective of identifying specific properties of the fine atmospheric aerosol from combustion sources that are responsible for toxicological effects and can be used as new metrics for health-related outdoor pollution studies. In this paper, we present the overall methodology of RHAPS and introduce the phenomenology and the first data observed. A comprehensive physico-chemical aerosol characterization has been achieved by means of high-time resolution measurements (e.g., number size distributions, refractory chemical components, elemental composition) and low-time resolution analyses (e.g., oxidative potential, toxicological assays, chemical composition). Preliminary results indicate that, at the real atmospheric conditions observed (i.e., daily PM<subscript>1</subscript> from less than 4 to more than 50 μg m<superscript>−3</superscript>), high/low mass concentrations of PM<subscript>1</subscript>, as well as black carbon (BC) and water soluble Oxidative Potential (WSOP,) do not necessarily translate into high/low toxicity. Notably, these findings were observed during a variety of atmospheric conditions and aerosol properties and with different toxicological assessments. Findings suggest a higher complexity in the relations observed between atmospheric aerosol and toxicological endpoints that go beyond the currently used PM<subscript>1</subscript> metrics. Finally, we provide an outlook to companion papers where data will be analyzed in more detail, with the focus on source apportionment of PM<subscript>1</subscript> and the role of source emissions on aerosol toxicity, the OP as a predictive variable for PM<subscript>1</subscript> toxicity, and the related role of SOA possessing redox-active capacity, exposure-response relationships for PM<subscript>1</subscript>, and air quality models to forecast PM<subscript>1</subscript> toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734433
Volume :
13
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157129098
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos13050704