A pilot study of the behavior of gas- and particle-phase ETS tracers in residences

Publication Type
Conference Proceedings
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Abstract

Our previous study of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in a three-room environmental chamber showed that smoking history significantly influenced inter-room ETS transport, particularly of gas-phase nicotine. We conducted a three-home pilot study where smoking was limited to one room. Single-smoker residences were monitored during five one-week periods while the smoker participated in a smoking cessation program. Nicotine traced ETS particles were detected reliably in the smoking rooms (SRs) and unreliably in the non-smoking rooms (NSRs). On average, the ventilation- and volume-normalized smoking rate, 0.1 Cigarette-h-1m-3, added about 17 and 4 µg m-3 of ETS particles into the SR and NSR, while average nicotine concentration increases were 2 and 0.06 µg m-3, respectively. Thus, nicotine tracers may underestimate ETS particle exposure in a NSR (e.g., a child's bedroom) by a factor of 2 to 8. In other words, ETS exposure predicted from nicotine concentrations could be almost an order of magnitude lower than actual exposure.

Conference Name
Proceedings of the Indoor Air 2002 Conference, Monterey, CA
Volume
2
Year of Conference
2002
Pagination
500-505
Publisher
Indoor Air 2002, Santa Cruz, CA
Custom 1
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