Research Output
Human exposure to particulate and gaseous pollutants in a bar.
  There is increasing evidence of a causal link between airborne particles and ill health and this study examined the exposure to both airborne particles and the gas phase contaminants of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) in a bar. The work reported here utilized concurrent and continuous monitoring using real-time optical scattering personal samplers to record particulate (PM10) concentrations at two internal locations. Very high episodes were observed in seating areas compared with the bar area. A photo-acoustic multi-gas analyser was used to record the gas phases (CO and CO2) at eight different locations throughout the bar and showed little spatial variation. This gave a clear indication of the problems associated with achieving acceptable Indoor Air Quality in a public space and identified a fundamental problem with the simplistic design approach taken to ventilate the space. Both gaseous and particulate concentrations within the bar were below maximum recommended levels although the time-series analysis illustrated the highly episodic nature of this exposure.

  • Date:

    07 December 2003

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Library of Congress:

    TH Building construction

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    697 Heating, ventilating & air-conditioning

Citation

Currie, J. & Capper, G. (2003). Human exposure to particulate and gaseous pollutants in a bar. ISBN 981-04-9974-4

Authors

Keywords

Pollutants; tobacco smoke; gas; public building; particulate;

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