Effect of Ozone, Clothing, Temperature, and Humidity on the Total OH Reactivity Emitted from Humans
Journal article, 2021

People influence indoor air chemistry through their chemical emissions via breath and skin. Previous studies showed that direct measurement of total OH reactivity of human emissions matched that calculated from parallel measurements of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from breath, skin, and the whole body. In this study, we determined, with direct measurements from two independent groups of four adult volunteers, the effect of indoor temperature and humidity, clothing coverage (amount of exposed skin), and indoor ozone concentration on the total OH reactivity of gaseous human emissions. The results show that the measured concentrations of VOCs and ammonia adequately account for the measured total OH reactivity. The total OH reactivity of human emissions was primarily affected by ozone reactions with organic skin-oil constituents and increased with exposed skin surface, higher temperature, and higher humidity. Humans emitted a comparable total mixing ratio of VOCs and ammonia at elevated temperature-low humidity and elevated temperature-high humidity, with relatively low diversity in chemical classes. In contrast, the total OH reactivity increased with higher temperature and higher humidity, with a larger diversity in chemical classes compared to the total mixing ratio. Ozone present, carbonyl compounds were the dominant reactive compounds in all of the reported conditions.

indoor chemistry

ozone deposition velocity

volatile organic compounds

indoor ozone

human skin emissions

Author

Nora Zannoni

Max Planck Society

Mengze Li

Max Planck Society

Nijing Wang

Max Planck Society

Lisa Ernle

Max Planck Society

G. Beko

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Pawel Wargocki

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Sarka Langer

IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Services Engineering

Charles J. Weschler

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Rutgers University

Glenn Morrison

The University of North Carolina System

Jonathan Williams

Max Planck Society

Environmental Science & Technology

0013-936X (ISSN) 1520-5851 (eISSN)

Vol. 55 20 13614-13624 01831

Subject Categories

Inorganic Chemistry

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1021/acs.est.1c01831

PubMed

34591444

More information

Latest update

3/6/2024 1