Abstract:
Indoor hazardous airborne carbonyls were quantified in five natural-ventilated roadside dwellings in
Colombo, Sri Lanka. The total concentrations of all targeted carbonyls ranged from 13.6 to 18.6 μg/m3.
Formaldehyde (C1) was the most abundant carbonyl, followed by acetaldehyde (C2) and acetone (C3K). The
concentrations of C1 and C2 ranged from 3.3 to 8.5 μg/m3 and 2.3 to 4.4 μg/m3, respectively, which accounted
for 23 to 42%and 18 to 26%respectively, to the total quantified carbonyls. The highest carbonyls levels were
obtained in the dwelling located in an urban district with a mixture of industrial, commercial and residential
areas. Much lower concentrations of carbonyls were measured in a light local traffic value was counted.
Moderate correlations between individual combustion markers from vehicular emissions suggest the strong
impacts from traffics to the indoor airs. The concentrations of C1 and C2 were compared with international
indoor guidelines established by different authorities. A health assessment was conducted by estimation of
inhalation cancer risk, implementing the inhalation unit risk values provided by Integrated Risk Information
System (IRIS), associated with C1 and C2, which were 6.2 × 10−5 and 7.7 × 10−6, respectively. Even though
the risks did not reach the action level (1 × 10−4), their health impact should not be overlooked. This kick-off
indoor monitoring study provides valuable scientific data to the environmental science community since only
limit data is available in Sri Lanka.
1. Introduction
Airborne carbonyls are ubiquitous but toxic, and previous studies
have shown their presences in the atmosphere are associated to the
health impacts on human, such as skin allergy, eye and respiratory irritations
while their levels exceed thresholds (Erdem et al., 1996; WHO,
2000, 2010).
Citation:
Chan, C. S., Ranasinghe, R. S. A., Ho, S. S. H., Ho, K. F., Yim, S. H. L., Sugathapala, A. G. T., Lee, S. C., Hung, W. T., Huang, Y., & Zhang, H. (2018). Evaluation of hazardous airborne carbonyls in five urban roadside dwellings: A comprehensive indoor air assessment in Sri Lanka. Atmospheric Pollution Research, 9(2), 270–277. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apr.2017.10.002