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Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.

Nitrous acid (HONO) may be generated by heterogeneous reactions of nitrogen dioxide and direct emission from combustion sources. Interactions among nitrogen oxides and ozone are important for outdoor photochemical reactions. However, little is known of indoor HONO levels or the relationship between...

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Autores principales: Lee, Kiyoung, Xue, Jianping, Geyh, Alison S, Ozkaynak, Halûk, Leaderer, Brian P, Weschler, Charles J, Spengler, John D
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11836142
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author Lee, Kiyoung
Xue, Jianping
Geyh, Alison S
Ozkaynak, Halûk
Leaderer, Brian P
Weschler, Charles J
Spengler, John D
author_facet Lee, Kiyoung
Xue, Jianping
Geyh, Alison S
Ozkaynak, Halûk
Leaderer, Brian P
Weschler, Charles J
Spengler, John D
author_sort Lee, Kiyoung
collection PubMed
description Nitrous acid (HONO) may be generated by heterogeneous reactions of nitrogen dioxide and direct emission from combustion sources. Interactions among nitrogen oxides and ozone are important for outdoor photochemical reactions. However, little is known of indoor HONO levels or the relationship between residential HONO, NO(2), and O(3) concentrations in occupied houses. Six-day integrated indoor and outdoor concentrations of the three pollutants were simultaneously measured in two communities in Southern California using passive samplers. The average indoor HONO concentration was 4.6 ppb, compared to 0.9 ppb for outdoor HONO. Average indoor and outdoor NO(2)concentrations were 28 and 20.1 ppb, respectively. Indoor O(3) concentrations were low (average 14.9 ppb) in comparison to the outdoor levels (average 56.5 ppb). Housing characteristics, including community and presence of a gas range, were significantly associated with indoor NO(2) and HONO concentrations. Indoor HONO levels were closely correlated with indoor NO(2) levels and were about 17% of indoor NO(2) concentrations. Indoor HONO levels were inversely correlated with indoor O(3) levels. The measurements demonstrated the occurrence of substantial residential indoor HONO concentrations and associations among the three indoor air pollutants.
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spelling pubmed-12407282005-11-08 Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments. Lee, Kiyoung Xue, Jianping Geyh, Alison S Ozkaynak, Halûk Leaderer, Brian P Weschler, Charles J Spengler, John D Environ Health Perspect Research Article Nitrous acid (HONO) may be generated by heterogeneous reactions of nitrogen dioxide and direct emission from combustion sources. Interactions among nitrogen oxides and ozone are important for outdoor photochemical reactions. However, little is known of indoor HONO levels or the relationship between residential HONO, NO(2), and O(3) concentrations in occupied houses. Six-day integrated indoor and outdoor concentrations of the three pollutants were simultaneously measured in two communities in Southern California using passive samplers. The average indoor HONO concentration was 4.6 ppb, compared to 0.9 ppb for outdoor HONO. Average indoor and outdoor NO(2)concentrations were 28 and 20.1 ppb, respectively. Indoor O(3) concentrations were low (average 14.9 ppb) in comparison to the outdoor levels (average 56.5 ppb). Housing characteristics, including community and presence of a gas range, were significantly associated with indoor NO(2) and HONO concentrations. Indoor HONO levels were closely correlated with indoor NO(2) levels and were about 17% of indoor NO(2) concentrations. Indoor HONO levels were inversely correlated with indoor O(3) levels. The measurements demonstrated the occurrence of substantial residential indoor HONO concentrations and associations among the three indoor air pollutants. 2002-02 /pmc/articles/PMC1240728/ /pubmed/11836142 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Lee, Kiyoung
Xue, Jianping
Geyh, Alison S
Ozkaynak, Halûk
Leaderer, Brian P
Weschler, Charles J
Spengler, John D
Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title_full Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title_fullStr Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title_full_unstemmed Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title_short Nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
title_sort nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone concentrations in residential environments.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240728/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11836142
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