Particulate matter exposure in biomass-burning homes of different communities of Brahmaputra Valley

Biomass burning for cooking prevalent in the developing countries is an issue which has been a concern for the past several decades for the noxious emissions and subsequent effects on the health of women and children due to the exposure of particulate matter (PM) and other gases. In this study, PM (...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental monitoring and assessment 2021-12, Vol.193 (12), p.856-856, Article 856
Hauptverfasser: Gogoi, Dharitri, Sazid, Abdullah, Bora, Jayanta, Deka, Pratibha, Balachandran, Srinivasan, Hoque, Raza R.
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container_end_page 856
container_issue 12
container_start_page 856
container_title Environmental monitoring and assessment
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creator Gogoi, Dharitri
Sazid, Abdullah
Bora, Jayanta
Deka, Pratibha
Balachandran, Srinivasan
Hoque, Raza R.
description Biomass burning for cooking prevalent in the developing countries is an issue which has been a concern for the past several decades for the noxious emissions and subsequent effects on the health of women and children due to the exposure of particulate matter (PM) and other gases. In this study, PM (PM 1 , PM 2.5 , and PM 10 ) were measured in biomass-burning households for different communities of Brahmaputra Valley region northeast India by a 31-channel aerosol spectrometer. The levels of emission of PM in the case of different community households were found to be significantly different. Also, the emission characteristics of different cooking time of the day were found to be different across communities. The emission levels in the biomass-burning households were compared with emission in household using “clean” LPG fuel, and it was found that the biomass fuels emitted 10–12 times more PM 2.5 and 6–7 times more PM 10 . The number densities of the emission were found to be more with smaller sizes of particulates which could explain why such biomass-burning emissions can pose with greater health risks. The exposure doses were calculated and were found to be about three times higher in biomass-burning houses than “clean” LPG fuel. It is important to note that the exposure from biomass burning while cooking has a gender perspective. The woman of the house generally takes care of the activities in the kitchen and get exposed to the noxious PM and the gases. Children often accompany their mothers and face the same fate.
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subjects Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Biofuels
Biomass
Biomass burning
Burning
Children
Cooking
Developing countries
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Ecotoxicology
Emission
Emissions
Environment
Environmental Management
Environmental monitoring
Environmental science
Exposure
Fuels
Gases
Gender
Health risks
Households
LDCs
Liquefied petroleum gas
Monitoring/Environmental Analysis
Particulate emissions
Particulate matter
Particulates
Suspended particulate matter
Valleys
Women
Womens health
title Particulate matter exposure in biomass-burning homes of different communities of Brahmaputra Valley
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