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Report: Combustion Byproducts and Their Health Effects: Summary of the 10th International Congress

Authors :
JoAnn S. Lighty
Antonio D'Alessio
Kirk R. Smith
Tobias Stoeger
William A. Suk
Brian K. Gullett
Donald Lucas
Adel F. Sarofim
Mel Keener
Anna Ciajolo
Slawomir M. Lomnicki
Demetrio Pitea
Paige E. Tolbert
Andrea D’Anna
Günter Oberdörster
Ralf Zimmermann
Heather F Henry
Barry Dellinger
Ron Wyzga
Dellinger, B
D’Alessio, A
D’Anna, A
Ciajolo, A
Gullett, B
Henry, H
Keener, M
Lighty, J
Lomnicki, S
Lucas, D
Öberdorster, G
Pitea, D
Suk, W
Sarofim, A
Smith, K
Stöger, T
Tolbert, P
Wyzga, R
Zimmermann, R
B., Dellinger
D'Alessio, Antonio
D'Anna, Andrea
A., Ciajolo
B., Gullett
H., Henry
M., Keener
J. A., Lighty
S., Lomnicki
D., Luca
G., Öberdorster
D., Pitea
W., Suk
A., Sarofim
K. R., Smith
T., Stöger
P., Tolbert
R., Wyzga
R., Zimmermann
Source :
Environmental engineering science 25 (2008): 1107–1114. doi:10.1089/ees.2008.0233, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Dellinger, Barry; D'Alessio, Antonio; D'Anna, Andrea; Ciajolo, Anna; Gullett, Brian; Henry, Heather; Keener, Mel; Lighty, JoAnn; Lomnicki, Slawomir; Lucas, Donald; Oberdorster, Gunter; Pitea, Demetrio; Suk, William; Sarofim, Adel; Smith, Kirk R.; Stoeger, Tobias; Tolbert, Paige; Wyzga, Ron; Zimmermann, Ralf/titolo:Combustion Byproducts and Their Health Effects: Summary of the 10(th) International Congress/doi:10.1089%2Fees.2008.0233/rivista:Environmental engineering science/anno:2008/pagina_da:1107/pagina_a:1114/intervallo_pagine:1107–1114/volume:25
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2008.

Abstract

The 10th International Congress on Combustion Byproducts and their Health Effects was held in Ischia, Italy, from June 17-20, 2007. It is sponsored by the US NIEHS, NSF, Coalition for Responsible Waste Incineration (CRWI), and Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). The congress focused on: the origin, characterization, and health impacts of combustion-generated fine and ultrafine particles; emissions of mercury and dioxins, and the development/application of novel analytical/diagnostic tools. The consensus of the discussion was that particle-associated organics, metals, and persistent free radicals (PFRs) produced by combustion sources are the likely source of the observed health impacts of airborne PM rather than simple physical irritation of the particles. Ultrafine particle-induced oxidative stress is a likely progenitor of the observed health impacts, but important biological and chemical details and possible catalytic cycles remain unresolved. Other key conclusions were: (1) In urban settings, 70% of airborne fine particles are a result of combustion emissions and 50% are due to primary emissions from combustion sources, (2) In addition to soot, combustion produces one, possibly two, classes of nanoparticles with mean diameters of ∼10 nm and ∼1 nm. (3) The most common metrics used to describe particle toxicity, viz. surface area, sulfate concentration, total carbon, and organic carbon, cannot fully explain observed health impacts, (4) Metals contained in combustion-generated ultrafine and fine particles mediate formation of toxic air pollutants such as PCDD/F and PFRs. (5) The combination of metal-containing nanoparticles, organic carbon compounds, and PFRs can lead to a cycle generating oxidative stress in exposed organisms. © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2008.

Details

ISSN :
15579018 and 10928758
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Engineering Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d08c621cc343e4daee50f5da5bede40a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/ees.2008.0233