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Indoor air quality in schools of a highly polluted south Mediterranean area
Author(s) -
Ruggieri Silvia,
Longo Valeria,
Perrino Cinzia,
Canepari Silvia,
Drago Gaspare,
L’Abbate Luca,
Balzan Martin,
Cuttitta Giuseppina,
Scaccianoce Gianluca,
Minardi Remo,
Viegi Giovanni,
Cibella Fabio
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
indoor air
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.387
H-Index - 99
eISSN - 1600-0668
pISSN - 0905-6947
DOI - 10.1111/ina.12529
Subject(s) - environmental science , indoor air quality , pollutant , environmental chemistry , relative humidity , air quality index , mediterranean climate , humidity , environmental engineering , threshold limit value , indoor air , chemistry , meteorology , geography , organic chemistry , archaeology
This study aimed at surveying lower secondary schools in southern Italy, in a highly polluted area. A community close to an industrial area and three villages in rural areas was investigated. Indoor temperature, relative humidity (RH), gaseous pollutants (CO 2 and NO 2 ), selected biological pollutants in indoor dust, and the indoor/outdoor mass concentration and elemental composition of PM 2.5 were ascertained. Temperature and RH were within, or close to, the comfort range, while CO 2 frequently exceeded the threshold of 1000 ppm, indicating inadequate air exchange rate. In all the classrooms, median NO 2 levels were above the WHO threshold value. Dermatophagoides p. allergen concentration was below the sensitizing threshold, while high endotoxin levels were detected in the classrooms, suggesting schools may produce significant risks of endotoxin exposure. Concentration and solubility of PM 2.5 elements were used to identify the sources of indoor particles. Indoor concentration of most elements was higher than outdoors. Resuspension was responsible for the indoor increase in soil components. For elements from industrial emission (Cd, Co, Ni, Pb, Sb, Tl, V), the indoor concentration depended on penetration from the outside. For these elements, differences in rural vs industrial concentrations were found, suggesting industrial sources may influence indoor air quality nearby schools.