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Found 9759 publications. Showing page 228 of 391:

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Hazard and exposure assessment of do-it-yourself products forimpregnation

Højriis, Sara; Christensen, Frans; Larssen, Carsten; Nikiforov, Vladimir; Sørli, Jorid Birkelund; Jensen, Alexander Christian Østerskov (eds.)

A large number of do-it-yourself impregnation products are marketed to Danish consumers. The products are typically used for re-impregnation of consumer products (e.g. footware and outdoor clothing) immediately after the products have been purchased or when the water and/or dirt-repellent effect begins to diminish.

The Danish Environmental Protection Agency has chosen to make a survey of the market, where 110 do-it-yourself impregnation products were identified within ten different application categories. Out of these products, 14 were included in initial chemical content analyzes, as well as hazard and exposure analyzes. The main components in the majority of the products were saturated hydrocarbons, but some of the products also contained oxygen-containing solvents (e.g. alcohols, ethers, esters or ketones). The potential hazard of 12 of the 14 selected impregnation spray products was performed by measuring acute respiratory toxicity. Of the 12 products tested, 10 inhibited the function of the lung surfactant and may therefore potentially be harmful by inhalation.

On the basis of this study, it could not be demonstrated that the products with PFAS resulted in an inhibition of the lung surfactant at lower doses as compared to products without PFAS; in fact, the lowest inhibitory doses were seen for impregnating agents based on siloxanes/silicones. The results show that the hazardous properties of an impregnation product cannot be determined solely on the basis of the ingredients, and it is therefore necessary to examine the ability of the individual products to inhibit the lung surfactant in connection with a hazard assessment.

Danish Environmental Protection Agency

2023

Havisens rolle som sesongvarsler.

Benestad, R.; Orsolini, Y.; Melsom, A.; Kindem, I.; Senan, R.

2012

Have aerosols affected precipitation variations in Europe?

Stjern, C.W.; Stohl, A.; Kristjánsson, J.E.

2010

Har klimatiltakene gått for langt? (Tema: Bompenger)

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad (interview subject); Hanssen, Hege Iren (journalist)

2019

Har installert kun én luftmåler på tre år: – Veldig overrasket over den dårlige responsen

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad (interview subject); Jordheim, Hans (journalist)

2019

Har diskutert mye i spaltene, nå klarnet de luften: - Vi er enige om det meste

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad; Tørnkvist, Kjersti Karlsen; Hverven, Per Erik (interview subjects); Bergerud, Bjørn Ivar (journalist)

2020

Halogenated organic contaminants (HOCs) and mercury in dead or dying seabirds on Bjørnøya (Svalbard). TA-2222/2007

Knudsen, L.B.; Sagerup, K.; Polder, A.; Schlabach, M.; Josefsen, T.D.; Strøm, H.; Skåre, J.U.; Gabrielsen, G.W.

2007

Halogenated greenhouse gases in Europe: Trends, emissions and impacts. NILU PP

Stordal, F.; Myhre, G.; Isaksen, I.S.A.; Schmidbauer, N.; Hermansen, O.; Lunder, C.; Holmén, K.; Simmonds, P.; McCulloch, A.; Reimann, S.; Maione, M.; Mahieu, E.; Notholt, J.; Manning, A.

2004

Halogen chemistry in volcanic plumes: a 1D framework based on MOCAGE 1D (version R1.18.1) preparing 3D global chemistry modelling

Marécal, Virginie; Voisin-Plessis, Ronan; Roberts, Tarda Jane; Aiuppa, Alessandro; Narivelo, Herizo; Hamer, Paul David; Josse, Beatrice; Guth, Jonathan; Surl, Luke

HBr emissions from volcanoes lead rapidly to the formation of BrO within volcanic plumes and have an impact on tropospheric chemistry, at least at the local and regional scales. The motivation of this paper is to prepare a framework for further 3D modelling of volcanic halogen emissions in order to determine their fate within the volcanic plume and then in the atmosphere at the regional and global scales. The main aim is to evaluate the ability of the model to produce a realistic partitioning of bromine species within a grid box size typical of MOCAGE (Model Of atmospheric Chemistry At larGE scale) 3D (0.5∘ × 0.5∘). This work is based on a 1D single-column configuration of the global chemistry-transport model MOCAGE that has low enough computational cost to allow us to perform a large set of sensitivity simulations. This paper uses the emissions from the Mount Etna eruption on 10 May 2008. Several reactions are added to MOCAGE to represent the volcanic plume halogen chemistry. A simple plume parameterisation is also implemented and tested. The use of this parameterisation tends to only slightly limit the efficiency of BrO net production. Both simulations with and without the parameterisation give results for the partitioning of the bromine species, of ozone depletion and of the ratio that are consistent with previous studies.

A series of test experiments were performed to evaluate the sensitivity of the results to the composition of the emissions (primary sulfate aerosols, Br radical and NO) and to the effective radius assumed for the volcanic sulfate aerosols. Simulations show that the plume chemistry is sensitive to all these parameters. We also find that the maximum altitude of the eruption changes the BrO production, which is linked to the vertical variability of the concentrations of oxidants in the background air. These sensitivity tests display changes in the bromine chemistry cycles that are generally at least as important as the plume parameterisation. Overall, the version of the MOCAGE chemistry developed for this study is suitable to produce the expected halogen chemistry in volcanic plumes during daytime and night-time.

2023

Halfway to doubling of CO2 radiative forcing.

Myhre, G.; Myhre, C. L.; Forster, P. M.; Shine, K. P.

2017

hackAIR: Towards raising awareness about air quality in Europe by developing a collective online platform

Kosmidis, Evangelos; Syropoulou, Panagiota; Tekes, Stavros; Schneider, Philipp; Spyromitros-Xioufis, Eleftherios; Riga, Marina; Charitidis, Polychronis; Moumtzidou, Anastasia; Papadopoulos, Symeon; Vrochidis, Stefanos; Kompatsiaris, Ioannis; Stavrakas, Ilias; Hloupis, George; Loukidis, Andronikos; Kourtidis, Konstantinos; Georgoulias, Aristeidis K.; Alexandri, Georgia

Although air pollution is one of the most significant environmental factors posing a threat to human health worldwide, air quality data are scarce or not easily accessible in most European countries. The current work aims to develop a centralized air quality data hub that enables citizens to contribute to air quality monitoring. In this work, data from official air quality monitoring stations are combined with air pollution estimates from sky-depicting photos and from low-cost sensing devices that citizens build on their own so that citizens receive improved information about the quality of the air they breathe. Additionally, a data fusion algorithm merges air quality information from various sources to provide information in areas where no air quality measurements exist.

MDPI

2018

hackAIR: a Collective Awareness Platform for Outdoor Air Pollution.

Liu, H-Y.; Grossberndt, S.; hackAIR consortium.

2016

Går mot rekordlite hull i ozonlaget

Hansen, Georg Heinrich (interview subject); Elster, Kristian (journalist)

2019

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