Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Wang J" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 First report of synthetic antioxidants in baby wipes: Insights into occurrence, sources, and infant exposure Wang X; Liu W; Wang J; Johannessen C; Zhang X; Xia K; Wu X; Liu Q; 41259909
CHEMBIOCHEM
2 International interlaboratory study to normalize liquid chromatography-based mycotoxin retention times through implementation of a retention index system Kelman MJ; Renaud JB; McCarron P; Hoogstra S; Chow W; Wang J; Varga E; Patriarca A; Vaya AM; Visintin L; Nguyen T; De Boevre M; De Saeger S; Karanghat V; Vuckovic D; McMullin DR; Dall' Asta C; Ayeni K; Warth B; Huang M; Tittlemier S; Mats L; Cao R; Sulyok M; Xu K; Berthiller F; Kuhn M; Cramer B; Ciasca B; Lattanzio V; De Baere S; Croubels S; DesRochers N; Sura S; Bates J; Wright EJ; Thapa I; Blackwell BA; Zhang K; Wong J; Burns L; Borts DJ; Sumarah MW; 39913989
CHEMBIOCHEM
3 Guest editorial: Papers from the 18th joint workshop on Augmented Environments for Computer Assisted Interventions (AE-CAI) at MICCAI 2024: Guest editors' foreword Linte CA; Yaniv Z; Chen E; Drouin S; Kersten-Oertel M; McLeod J; Sarikaya D; Wang J; 39834896
ENCS
4 Crowd Counting Using Meta-Test-Time Adaptation Ma C; Neri F; Gu L; Wang Z; Wang J; Qing A; Wang Y; 39252679
ENCS
5 Factors associated with change in moderate or severe symptoms of anxiety and depression in community-living adults and older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic Vasiliadis HM; Spagnolo J; Bartram M; Fleury MJ; Gouin JP; Grenier S; Roberge P; Shen-Tu G; Vena JE; Lamoureux-Lamarche C; Wang J; 38117417
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Factors associated with mental health service use during the pandemic: Initiation and barriers Vasiliadis HM; Spagnolo J; Fleury MJ; Gouin JP; Roberge P; Bartram M; Grenier S; Shen-Tu G; Vena JE; Wang J; 37646244
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Refined design of ventilation systems to mitigate infection risk in hospital wards: Perspective from ventilation openings setting Ren C; Wang J; Feng Z; Kim MK; Haghighat F; Cao SJ; 37336354
ENCS
8 Mental health service use and associated predisposing, enabling and need factors in community living adults and older adults across Canada Vasiliadis HM; Spagnolo J; Fleury MJ; Gouin JP; Roberge P; Bartram M; Grenier S; Shen-Tu G; Vena JE; Wang J; 37046270
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Intelligent operation, maintenance, and control system for public building: Towards infection risk mitigation and energy efficiency Ren C; Zhu HC; Wang J; Feng Z; Chen G; Haghighat F; Cao SJ; 36941886
ENCS
10 Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in groundwater: current understandings and challenges to overcome Zhao Z; Li J; Zhang X; Wang L; Wang J; Lin T; 35593984
CHEMBIOCHEM
11 Seasonal source identification and source-specific health risk assessment of pollutants in road dust Wang J; Huang JJ; Mulligan C; 34510345
ENCS
12 Flame-Retardant and Polysulfide-Suppressed Ether-Based Electrolytes for High-Temperature Li-S Batteries He M; Li X; Holmes NG; Li R; Wang J; Yin G; Zuo P; Sun X; 34370436
ENCS
13 Mitigating COVID-19 infection disease transmission in indoor environment using physical barriers Ren C; Xi C; Wang J; Feng Z; Nasiri F; Cao SJ; Haghighat F; 34306996
ENCS
14 Indoor airborne disinfection with electrostatic disinfector (ESD): Numerical simulations of ESD performance and reduction of computing time Feng Z; Cao SJ; Wang J; Kumar P; Haghighat F; 33994653
ENCS
15 Cost-Effective Water-Soluble Poly(vinyl alcohol) as a Functional Binder for High-Sulfur-Loading Cathodes in Lithium-Sulfur Batteries. Liao J, Liu Z, Wang J, Ye Z 32309738
ENCS
16 Preservation of organic matter in marine sediments by inner-sphere interactions with reactive iron. Barber A, Brandes J, Leri A, Lalonde K, Balind K, Wirick S, Wang J, Gélinas Y 28336935
CHEMBIOCHEM

 

Title:Seasonal source identification and source-specific health risk assessment of pollutants in road dust
Authors:Wang JHuang JJMulligan C
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34510345/
DOI:10.1007/s11356-021-16326-8
Publication:Environmental science and pollution research international
Keywords:Heavy metalsRisk assessmentRoad dustSeasonal source-specific risksSource apportionment
PMID:34510345 Category: Date Added:2021-09-13
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 College of Environmental Science and Engineering/Sino-Canada Joint R&D Centre on Water and Environmental Safety, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China.
2 College of Environmental Science and Engineering/Sino-Canada Joint R&D Centre on Water and Environmental Safety, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China. huangj@nankai.edu.cn.
3 Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1M8, Canada.

Description:

Humans who are exposed to metals in road dust may have potential health risks through touching, ingesting, and inhaling the suspended road dust. There were limited studies to link seasonal emission sources to health risks from metals in road dust. In this study, metals in road dust from different functional areas were seasonally monitored. The contributions of the pollutant sources in study areas varied with seasons. By combining the source apportionment model (PMF), road dust emission model, and health risk models (HI: hazard index and ILCR: incremental lifetime carcinogenic risk), industrial and construction activity was identified as the crucial source of both the pollutants in road dust (29-47%), and the HI for adults (27-45%) and children (41-50%) in different seasons. The traffic non-exhaust emission dominated in the carcinogenic risks for children in spring (45%) and summer (36%). Factors such as seasons, particle size, metal bioavailability, human exposure time, and exposure area were all taken into consideration to avoid overestimating or underestimating health risks. The carcinogenic risks for children (1.6 E-06) and adults (2.8 E-06) exposed to Cr both exceed the minimum threshold (10-6). It means that the potential risks were acceptable but could not be completely neglected. Measured metals mainly posed hazard to human health through ingestion route. Pb and Mn, Fe and Mn were the main harmful elements that induced non-carcinogenic risks for adults and children, respectively. Effectively identifying the source-specific health risks in different seasons will help in the formulation of adaptive strategies to diminish the potential risks.





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