Journal of hazardous materials | 2021

Verification of particle matter generation due to deterioration of building materials as the cause of indoor fine dust.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Particles of fine dust are pollutants that adversely affect indoor air quality and exacerbate human respiratory diseases. The aging of the building was pointed out as a source of fine dust indoors. The aging of buildings has various causes of deterioration. During various deterioration, friction adversely affects the building floor finish. In this study, an accelerated friction deterioration device was used to confirm the generation of fine dust particles through the frictional deterioration of floor finishes in buildings. The study found that the concentration of fine dust particles attributed to deteriorating flooring was 327\xa0mg/m3 in PM2.5 and 4828\xa0mg/m3 in PM10 and confirmed that particle distribution differs depending on the surface of the flooring. Particles of 10\xa0µm or less were observed through particle analysis. The study confirmed that fine dust particles did not diffuse in a specific direction and that the detected fine dust particles could be attributed to deterioration. Further research is needed on the detection of fine dust in degraded building finishing materials.

Volume 416
Pages \n 125920\n
DOI 10.1016/J.JHAZMAT.2021.125920
Language English
Journal Journal of hazardous materials

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