Jennifer L. Benning
South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jennifer L. Benning.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Ying Xu; Zhe Liu; Jinsoo Park; Per Axel Clausen; Jennifer L. Benning; John C. Little
The emission of di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) from vinyl flooring (VF) was measured in specially designed stainless steel chambers. In duplicate chamber studies, the gas-phase concentration in the chamber increased slowly and reached a steady state level of 0.8-0.9 μg/m(3) after about 20 days. By increasing the area of vinyl flooring and decreasing that of the stainless steel surface within the chamber, the time to reach steady state was significantly reduced, compared to a previous study (1 month versus 5 months). The adsorption isotherm of DEHP on the stainless steel chamber surfaces was explicitly measured using solvent extraction and thermal desorption. The strong partitioning of DEHP onto the stainless steel surface was found to follow a simple linear relationship. Thermal desorption resulted in higher recovery than solvent extraction. Investigation of sorption kinetics showed that it takes several weeks for the sorption of DEHP onto the stainless steel surface to reach equilibrium. The content of DEHP in VF was measured at about 15% (w/w) using pressurized liquid extraction. The independently measured or calculated parameters were used to validate an SVOC emission model, with excellent agreement between model prediction and the observed gas-phase DEHP chamber concentrations.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Jennifer L. Benning; Zhe Liu; Andrea J. Tiwari; John C. Little; Linsey C. Marr
Phthalates are widely used as plasticizers, and improved ability to predict emissions of phthalates is of interest because of concern about their health effects. An experimental chamber was used to measure emissions of di-2-ethylhexyl-phthalate (DEHP) from vinyl flooring, with ammonium sulfate particles introduced to examine their influence on the emission rate and to measure the partitioning of DEHP onto airborne particles. When particles were introduced to the chamber at concentrations of 100 to 245 μg/m(3), the total (gas + particle) DEHP concentrations increased by a factor of 3 to 8; under these conditions, emissions were significantly enhanced compared to the condition without particles. The measured DEHP partition coefficient to ammonium sulfate particles with a median diameter of 45 ± 5 nm was 0.032 ± 0.003 m(3)/μg (95% confidence interval). The DEHP-particle sorption equilibration time was demonstrated to be less than 1 min. Both the partition coefficient and equilibration time agree well with predictions from the literature. This study represents the first known measurements of the particle-gas partition coefficient for DEHP. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that the emission rate of DEHP is substantially enhanced in the presence of particles. The particles rapidly sorb DEHP from the gas phase, allowing more to be emitted from the source, and also appear to enhance the convective mass-transfer coefficient itself. Airborne particles can influence SVOC fate and transport in the indoor environment, and these mechanisms must be considered in evaluating exposure and human health.
Indoor Air | 2015
Cong Liu; Yufeng Zhang; Jennifer L. Benning; John C. Little
A mechanistic model was developed to examine how natural ventilation influences residential indoor exposure to semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) via inhalation, dermal sorption, and dust ingestion. The effect of ventilation on indoor particle mass concentration and mass transfer at source/sink surfaces, and the enhancing effect of particles on mass transfer at source/sink surfaces are included. When air exchange rate increases from 0.6/h to 1.8/h, the steady-state SVOC (gas-phase plus particle phase with log KOA varying from 9 to 13) concentration in the idealized model decreases by about 60%. In contrast, for the same change in ventilation, the simulated indoor formaldehyde (representing volatile organic compounds) gas-phase concentration decreases by about 70%. The effect of ventilation on exposure via each pathway has a relatively insignificant association with the KOA of the SVOCs: a change of KOA from 10(9) to 10(13) results in a change of only 2-30%. Sensitivity analysis identifies the deposition rate of PM2.5 as a primary factor influencing the relationship between ventilation and exposure for SVOCs with log KOA = 13. The relationship between ventilation rate and air speed near surfaces needs to be further substantiated.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2018
Yaoxing Wu; Clara M. A. Eichler; Jianping Cao; Jennifer L. Benning; Amy Olson; Shengyang Chen; Cong Liu; Eric Warren Vejerano; Linsey C. Marr; John C. Little
The particle/gas partition coefficient Kp is an important parameter affecting the fate and transport of indoor semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) and resulting human exposure. Unfortunately, experimental measurements of Kp exist almost exclusively for atmospheric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, with very few studies focusing on SVOCs that occur in indoor environments. A specially designed tube chamber operating in the laminar flow regime was developed to measure Kp of the plasticizer di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) for one inorganic (ammonium sulfate) and two organic (oleic acid and squalane) particles. The values of Kp for the organic particles (0.23 ± 0.13 m3/μg for oleic acid and 0.11 ± 0.10 m3/μg for squalane) are an order of magnitude higher than those for the inorganic particles (0.011 ± 0.004 m3/μg), suggesting that the process by which the particles accumulate SVOCs is different. A mechanistic model based on the experimental design reveals that the presence of the particles increases the gas-phase concentration gradient in the boundary layer, resulting in enhanced mass transfer from the emission source into the air. This novel approach provides new insight into experimental designs for rapid Kp measurement and a sound basis for investigating particle-mediated mass transfer of SVOCs.
The 15th LACCEI International Multi-Conference for Engineering, Education, and Technology: “Global Partnership for Development and Engineering Education” | 2017
Alexis Long; Jennifer L. Benning; Christopher Shearer; Andrea Surovek; Stuart Kellogg
Future engineers must be able to incorporate sustainability into all aspects of their designs to meet the increasing demands for the world’s resources. Consequently, engineering educators have been challenged to integrate sustainability into existing curricula. Sustainability is a particularly complex problem requiring innovation, which often stems from diversity. Service learning programs have been shown to be an attractive and effective method to blend sustainability into engineering education curricula while also encouraging diversity in engineering. In particular, Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) is a well-established service-learning program at 24 universities that has been known to accomplish this by presenting engineering in social context and engaging students in designing solutions to real world problems. This paper describes the complex problem of sustainability and its relationship with diversity and student attitudes in engineering, demonstrates the EPICS program’s ability to promote sustainability and diversity in engineering, presents a research plan to evaluate its effectiveness, and provides preliminary results.
Building and Environment | 2011
Cynthia Howard-Reed; Zhe Liu; Jennifer L. Benning; Steven S. Cox; Daniel V. Samarov; Dennis D. Leber; Alfred T. Hodgson; Stephany Mason; Doyun Won; John C. Little
Journal of Environmental Quality | 2013
Christopher D. Lupo; David E. Clay; Jennifer L. Benning; James J. Stone
Building and Environment | 2016
Yaoxing Wu; Steven S. Cox; Ying Xu; Yirui Liang; Doyun Won; Xiaoyu Liu; Per Axel Clausen; Lars Rosell; Jennifer L. Benning; Yinping Zhang; John C. Little
Agricultural Systems | 2012
James J. Stone; Christopher R. Dollarhide; Jennifer L. Benning; C. Gregg Carlson; David E. Clay
frontiers in education conference | 2014
Jennifer L. Benning; Andrea Surovek; Daniel F. Dolan; Lyle Wilson; Andrew Thompson; Robert Pyatt