Use of real-time monitors to evaluate the potential exposure of secondhand electronic cigarette particulate matter inside vehicles

Electronic cigarette (ECIG) use continues to be highly prevalent, especially among youth and young adults. Potential exposure from secondhand ECIG particulate matter (PM) places bystanders in danger of inhaling harmful substances, especially in confined spaces. This study was conducted to measure the potential exposure from secondhand ECIG PM exposure in vehicles, with participants completing a 30-min ECIG use session in their own vehicle with their preferred ECIG device. Sessions included a 5-min, 10-puff directed bout (30-s interpuff interval), followed by a 25-min ad libitum bout in which participants could take as many puffs as desired. Real-time PM1, PM2.5, and PM10 (the 50% efficiency mass cut-off of that passes through a size-selective inlet at 1 μm, 2.5 μm, and 10 μm aerodynamic diameters, respectively) measurements were captured during the sessions using portable PM monitors (MiniWRAS, pDR, SidePak, and GeoAir2 low-cost monitors). A total of 56 participants with valid measurements were included in the study, with a total of 13 unique ECIG device brands, including Vuse Alto, Box Air Bar, ElfBar, Esco Bar, Aegis Legend, Hyde Edge, JUUL, Kang Onee Stick, Kang Onee Stick Plus, Nord X, Nord 2, Nord 3, and Vaporesso. During the 5-min directed bout, the highest real-time PM2.5 mean concentrations were 175 μg/m3 for the MiniWRAS, 1050 μg/m3 for pDR and 3314 μg/m3 for SidePak. The filter measurements were not detectable in most experiments, except for two participants, with one taking 205 puffs and the other taking 285 puffs, approximately 10 times the mean (30) puffs of all participants. The evaluation of GeoAir2 with the MiniWRAS showed a wide range of Pearson correlation coefficient (r) values, ranging from -0.03 to 1.00, for the 13 ECIG brands. The mass median diameter (0.31 μm-3.42 μm) and geometric standard deviation (2.47-8.21) were different based on the participants for the same ECIG brand.

Keywords: Electronic cigarettes; GeoAir2; Low-cost sensors; PM(2.5); Particulate matter; Secondhand exposure.

PubMed ID

37657722

Cite

Sousan S, Mooring R, Fresquez S, Park YM, Coombs V, Bertges N, Thomas L, Gold E, Gogineni A, Tiet A, Pender J, Soule EK. Use of real-time monitors to evaluate the potential exposure of secondhand electronic cigarette particulate matter inside vehicles. Environ Pollut. 2023 Nov 1;336:122480. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122480. Epub 2023 Aug 30. PMID: 37657722; PMCID: PMC10591990.

Center(s)

Publish Date

08/30/2023