 Presented by: Yifang Zhu, Ph.D., UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles
Presented by: Yifang Zhu, Ph.D., UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles
Tuesday, April 14, 2015, 1:00 p.m., PDT
Sierra Hearing Room, Second Floor, Cal EPA Headquarters, 1001 "I" Street, Sacramento, CA
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Presentation
Research Project
Overview
Exposures to vehicle-emitted PM₂.₅, black carbon (BC), and ultrafine   particles (UFPs), have been associated with adverse health effects.  As a   potential strategy to mitigate in-cabin exposure, we developed a novel   high efficiency cabin air (HECA) filter for passenger vehicles and an   on-board HECA filtration system for school buses.  
  Their performance was evaluated in 12 passenger vehicles and 6 school   buses, respectively.  UFP number concentration and size distribution as   well as BC and PM₂.₅ levels were concurrently monitored inside and   outside of each vehicle under three driving conditions: stationary, on   local roadways, and on freeways.  For passenger vehicles, data were   collected with no filter, the in-use original equipment manufacturer   (OEM) filter, and two prototypes of HECA filters (i.e., HECA A and B   filters).  For school buses, data were collected with and without   operating the filtration system equipped with HECA B filters.  For   passenger vehicles, the HECA B filters offered in-cabin concentration   reductions of 90 ± 8% for UFPs on average across all driving conditions,   which is much higher than the reductions seen with (or achieved by) the   OEM filters (50 ± 11% on average).  Similarly, the HECA B filters   offered an 81 ± 15% reduction for BC and 66 ± 28% for PM₂.₅ across all   driving conditions.  In comparison, across all driving conditions, the   in-use OEM filters only provided 31 ± 17% and 29 ± 20% reduction for BC   and PM₂.₅, respectively.  For school buses, across all driving   conditions, in-cabin UFP and BC levels were reduced by 88 ± 6% and 84 ±   5% on average, respectively, when the on-board HECA filtration system   was operating. The application of this technology in passenger vehicles   also kept in-cabin CO2 concentration below 1,000 ppm under outdoor air   mode.  In-cabin PM₂.₅ was also reduced from approximately 35 μg/m³ to 10   μg/m³.  
  This proof-of-concept study concludes that the HECA technology can   significantly reduce human exposures to UFPs, BC, and PM₂.₅ in passenger   vehicles and school buses. Practical application of the HECA filter,   however, requires long-term evaluations under a broader range of vehicle   models and driving conditions.  
Speaker Biography
Yifang Zhu, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of the Environmental Health Sciences Department, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Dr. Zhu's research interest is primarily in the field of air pollution, environmental exposure assessment, and aerosol science and technology. Specifically, she is interested in quantitative exposure/risk assessments on ultrafine particles from various indoor and outdoor sources. Dr. Zhu's current research focuses on measuring and modeling ultrafine particle emissions, transport, and transformation on and near roadways as well as in various indoor environments. Dr. Zhu's scholarship and creativity has been recognized by several national awards, including the Walter A. Rosenblith New Investigator Award from the Health Effects Institute in 2007, the Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation in 2009, and the Haagen-Smit Prize from Atmosphere Environment in 2011. Dr. Zhu was appointed to the California Air Resource Board's Research Screening Committee in January 2014. Dr. Zhu received her Ph.D. in Environmental Health Sciences from UCLA in 2003.
