Kingham 1998 - "Assessment of Exposure to Traffic-Related Fumes During the Journey to Work"
Kingham, Simon; Meaton, Julia; et al.
"Assessment of Exposure to Traffic-Related Fumes During the Journey to Work"
Transportation Research, Part D
July 1998; v.3, n.4; pp.271-274
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Relevance: medium-low
In a pilot study, the authors measured commuter's exposure to benzene and particulates using different modes (car, bus, train, road cyclist, path cyclist) but along similar routes(?). Findings include:
- The car driver had the highest mean exposure to benzene (108.3 micrograms/m^3) a factor of at least 4 and also the highest mean exposure to particulates (7.6 absorbance), but by a much smaller margin.
- Train riders had the lowest benzene exposure (12.9) and path cyclists had the lowest particulate exposure (2.7).
- The bus was slightly better than the road bike
- The exposure ratios for the car driver to the road cyclist were 4.05 for benzene and 1.26 for particulates.
- The exposure ratios for the road cyclist to the path cyclist were 1.73 for benzene and 2.41 for particulates.
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