与部分亚洲国家常见烹饪方法相关的各种微环境中 PM2.5 水平的比较分析

Nguyen Thi Kim Oanh, Lai Nguyen Huy, Wiphada Maneepatra, Ekbordin Winijkul, Adam Giandomenico, Kraichat Tantrakarnapa, Hoang Xuan Co, Dinh Manh Cuong, Ming-Chien Mark Tsou, To Thi Hien, Nguyen Doan Thien Chi, Tran Anh Ngan, S. C. Candice Lung
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摘要

全面分析了亚洲拥挤的大都市地区不同城市微环境中实际烹饪活动对 PM2.5 的影响。评估基于泰国一所大学校园、台湾餐馆、街头小贩和越南居民区商业烹饪的监测数据。用于 PM2.5 监测的在线仪器事先与参考设备进行了校准。考虑到通风条件和燃料类型--液化石油气(LPG)、木炭、稻草颗粒(RSP)和蜂窝煤球(HCB)炉灶,评估了烹饪活动对室内和室外 PM2.5 水平的影响。在密集烹饪时段观察到的 PM2.5 含量高于非烹饪时段。与液化石油气相比,使用固体燃料(RSP、木炭和蜂窝煤)烹饪会导致更高的 PM2.5 暴露水平。影响 PM2.5 水平的重要因素包括燃料的烧煮方式、炉灶的大小和设计(有无抽油烟机/排气扇)以及烹饪食物的类型(蒸煮或烤肉)。其他影响室内 PM2.5 水平的重要因素包括通风、室外排放物(交通、附近的烹饪活动)、室内污染源(顾客人数)和焚香。微环境周围的环境污染可能对测量到的 PM2.5 水平有很大影响,特别是在靠近繁忙道路或交通繁忙的地区。我们需要开展进一步的研究,以评估暴露于烹饪引起的 PM2.5 排放对人体健康的影响,从而为推广清洁烹饪提供科学依据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Comparative analysis of PM2.5 levels in various microenvironments associated with common cooking practices in selected Asian countries

Effects of real-life cooking activities on PM2.5 in different urban microenvironments of crowded and large metropolitan areas in Asia were comprehensively analyzed. The assessment was done based on monitoring data obtained for commercial cooking in a university campus in Thailand, restaurants in Taiwan, street food vendors, and residential cooking in Vietnam. Online instruments used for PM2.5 monitoring were priori calibrated against the reference equipment. The influence of cooking activities on indoor and outdoor PM2.5 levels was evaluated considering ventilation conditions and the type of fuel-cookstove of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), charcoal, rice straw pellets (RSP), and honeycomb coal briquettes (HCB). Higher levels of PM2.5 were observed during intensive cooking periods than in non-cooking periods. Cooking with solid fuel (RSP, charcoal, and HCB) induced higher exposure levels of PM2.5 than LPG. The fuel stoking practice, size and design of stoves (with or without hood/exhaust fan), and type of food being cooked (steaming or meat grilling) were important factors affecting the PM2.5 levels. Other important factors especially affecting indoor PM2.5 levels included ventilation, outdoor emissions (traffic, nearby cooking activities), indoor sources (number of customers), and incense burning. The ambient pollution in the surroundings of the microenvironments may contribute significantly to measured PM2.5 levels, especially for the locations close to busy roads or in areas with heavy traffic. Further studies are required to assess the impact of exposure to cooking-induced PM2.5 emissions on human health to provide scientific evidence to foster clean cooking practices.

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