Hospodsky D, Yamamoto N, Nazaroff W W, Miller D, Gorthala S, Peccia J
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Environmental Health, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.
Indoor Air. 2015 Dec;25(6):641-52. doi: 10.1111/ina.12172. Epub 2014 Dec 6.
Baseline information on size-resolved bacterial, fungal, and particulate matter (PM) indoor air concentrations and emission rates is presented for six school classrooms sampled in four countries. Human occupancy resulted in significantly elevated airborne bacterial (81 times on average), fungal (15 times), and PM mass (nine times) concentrations as compared to vacant conditions. Occupied indoor/outdoor (I/O) ratios consistently exceeded vacant I/O ratios. Regarding size distributions, average room-occupied bacterial, fungal, and PM geometric mean particle sizes were similar to one another while geometric means estimated for bacteria, fungi, and PM mass during vacant sampling were consistently lower than when occupied. Occupancy also resulted in elevated indoor bacterial-to-PM mass-based and number-based ratios above corresponding outdoor levels. Mean emission rates due to human occupancy were 14 million cells/person/h for bacteria, 14 million spore equivalents/person/h for fungi, and 22 mg/person/h for PM mass. Across all locations, indoor emissions contributed 83 ± 27% (bacteria), 66 ± 19% (fungi), and 83 ± 24% (PM mass) of the average indoor air concentrations during occupied times.
An extensive data set of bacterial and fungal size-distributed indoor air concentrations and emission rates is presented. Analysis of these data contributes to an understanding of how indoor bacterial and fungal aerosols are influenced by human occupancy. This work extends beyond prior culture and DNA-based microbiome studies in buildings to include quantitative relationships between size-resolved bacterial and fungal concentrations in indoor air and building parameters such as occupancy, ventilation, and outdoor conditions. The work indicates that occupancy-associated emissions (e.g., via resuspension and shedding) contribute more to both bacterial and fungal indoor air concentrations than do outdoor sources for the occupied classrooms investigated in this study.
本文给出了在四个国家采样的六个学校教室中,按粒径解析的细菌、真菌和颗粒物(PM)室内空气浓度及排放率的基线信息。与空置状态相比,人员在场导致空气中细菌(平均81倍)、真菌(15倍)和PM质量(9倍)浓度显著升高。有人占用时的室内/室外(I/O)比率始终超过空置时的I/O比率。关于粒径分布,有人占用时室内细菌、真菌和PM的平均几何平均粒径彼此相似,而空置采样期间细菌、真菌和PM质量的几何平均值始终低于有人占用时。人员在场还导致室内基于细菌与PM质量及数量的比率高于相应的室外水平。人员占用导致的平均排放率为细菌1400万个细胞/人/小时、真菌1400万个孢子当量/人/小时、PM质量22毫克/人/小时。在所有地点,室内排放在有人占用期间对平均室内空气浓度的贡献为细菌83±27%、真菌66±19%、PM质量83±24%。
本文给出了大量按粒径分布的细菌和真菌室内空气浓度及排放率数据集。对这些数据的分析有助于理解室内细菌和真菌气溶胶如何受到人员占用的影响。这项工作超越了此前基于培养和DNA的建筑微生物组研究,涵盖了按粒径解析的室内空气中细菌和真菌浓度与占用、通风和室外条件等建筑参数之间的定量关系。该研究表明,在本研究调查的有人占用的教室中,与占用相关的排放(如通过再悬浮和脱落)对室内细菌和真菌空气浓度的贡献比室外源更大。