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Winter Time Concentrations and Size Distribution of Bioaerosols in Different Residential Settings in the UK
Authors
A Hyvarinen
A Hyvarinen
+47 more
A Nevalainen
ACGIH
AL Pasanen
AL Pasanen
AL Pasanen
AM Jones
AM Pessi
AP Verhoeff
BG Shelton
CA Hunter
CA Hunter
CF Green
CM Liao
CS Li
D Haas
DP Strachan
E Levetin
E Medrela-Kuder
H Salonen
H Viitanen
Ian Colbeck
JA Dekoster
JD Miller
JH Lee
JM Macher
JS Pastuszka
L Raisi
M Kulmala
M Waegemaekers
MP Buttner
MP Fabian
MS Zuraimi
N Kalogerakis
P Ren
P Ren
RL Gorny
RL Gorny
S Mentese
T Lee
T Meklin
T Meklin
T Reponen
T Reponen
T Reponen
WH Lin
ZA Nasir
Zaheer Ahmad Nasir
Publication date
5 September 2012
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
The total concentration and size distribution of bioaerosols in three different types of housing (single room in shared accommodation [type I], single bedroom flat in three-storey building [type II] and two- or threebedroom detached houses [type III]) was assessed during the winter. This research was an extension of a previous study carried out in the summer. The measurement campaign was undertaken in winter 2008 and 30 houses were sampled. Samples were taken from kitchens, living rooms, corridors (only in housing type I) and outdoors with an Anderson 6 stage viable impactor. In housing type I, the total geometric mean concentration was highest in the corridor for both bacteria and fungi (3,171 and 1,281 CFU/m3, respectively). In type II residences, both culturable bacteria and fungi were greatest in the living rooms (3,487 and 833 CFU/m3, respectively). The living rooms in type III residences had largest number of culturable bacteria (1,361 CFU/m3) while fungi were highest in kitchens (280 CFU/m3). The concentrations of culturable bacteria and fungi were greater in mouldy houses than non-mouldy houses. A considerable variation was seen in the size distribution of culturable bacteria in type I residences compared to types II and III. For all housing types more than half of culturable bacterial and fungal aerosol were respirable (<4.7 μm) and so have the potential to penetrate into lower respiratory system. Considerable variation in concentration and size distribution within different housing types in the same geographical region highlights the impact of differences in design, construction, use and management of residential built environment on bioaerosols levels and consequent varied risk of population exposure to airborne biological agents. © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012
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University of Essex Research Repository
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oai:repository.essex.ac.uk:506...
Last time updated on 07/05/2013
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1007%2Fs11270-012-...
Last time updated on 31/03/2019