Indoor Emission, Oxidation, and New Particle Formation of Personal Care Product Related Volatile Organic Compounds
Journal article, 2024

Personal care products (PCPs) contain diverse volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and routine use of PCPs indoors has important implications for indoor air quality and human chemical exposures. This chamber study deployed aerosol instrumentation and two online mass spectrometers to quantify VOC emissions from the indoor use of five fragranced PCPs and examined the formation of gas-phase oxidation products and particles upon ozone-initiated oxidation of reactive VOCs. The tested PCPs include a perfume, a roll-on deodorant, a body spray, a hair spray, and a hand lotion. Indoor use of these PCPs emitted over 200 VOCs and resulted in indoor VOC mixing ratios of several parts per million. The VOC emission factors for the PCPs varied from 2 to 964 mg g-1. We identified strong emissions of terpenes and their derivatives, which are likely used as fragrant additives in the PCPs. When using the PCPs in the presence of indoor ozone, these reactive VOCs underwent oxidation reactions to form a variety of gas-phase oxidized vapors and led to rapid new particle formation (NPF) events with particle growth rates up to ten times higher than outdoor atmospheric NPF events. The resulting ultrafine particle concentrations reach ∼34000 to ∼200000 cm-3 during the NPF events.

Oxidized vapors

Inhalation exposure

Indoor ultrafine particles

Ozone

Chamber study

Author

Tianren Wu

College of Engineering and Applied Science

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Tatjana Müller

Max Planck Society

Nijing Wang

Max Planck Society

Joseph Byron

Max Planck Society

Sarka Langer

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Services Engineering

IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute

Jonathan Williams

Max Planck Society

Dusan Licina

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Environmental Science and Technology Letters

23288930 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00353

More information

Latest update

9/13/2024