管家婆免费开奖大全

Activities such as cooking can generate the potentially health-threatening indoor air particles Jeffrey Siegel studies (photo by Nathalie Parker via Flickr.com)

Researchers explore secret life of indoor air particles, cancer, water treatment

$12.1 million for 44 管家婆免费开奖大全 projects from Canada Foundation For Innovation

Forty-four 管家婆免费开奖大全 projects have been awarded a total of $12.1 million from the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) for infrastructure that will advance research in everything from water treatment to cancer.

One of them is led by Jeffrey Siegel of civil engineering. 鈥淓xploring the Secret Life of Indoor Air Particles鈥 investigates a little-known threat to human health.

Siegel says there are between 100 and 10,000 microscopic particles in every cubic centimetre of air.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 see them, but they鈥檙e all around us. We鈥檙e breathing them all the time. Even if we鈥檙e very conservative in our estimates, the average Canadian eats about seven kilograms of dust over a lifetime. And that鈥檚 just ingestion. We inhale a lot more.鈥

Indoor particles can be outdoor pollutants that migrated inside, or they can originate from indoor activities such as cooking and vacuuming. Some particles are benign, but others cause serious long-term health problems ranging from heart disease to lung cancer. Though we know they鈥檙e a threat 鈥 Siegel says they鈥檙e widely acknowledged as the number one environmental health risk 鈥 they don鈥檛 get as much press as their outdoor cousins.

鈥淩esearch on outdoor particles has been going on for decades and decades,鈥 says Siegel. 鈥淏ut the average Canadian spends 90 per cent of his or her time indoors. Compared to what we know about outdoor particles, we know nothing about indoor ones.鈥

Siegel has been working to understand the physical, chemical and biological characteristics of indoor particles 鈥 they鈥檙e all made up of chemicals that can be analyzed and microbes that can be identified using DNA sequencing. His CFI funding will purchase equipment that will allow him to study the physical characteristics of particles, too. This is important because the size of a particle is directly related to how dangerous it is to human health.

鈥淎 particle that is a tenth of a micron long [a micron is one-millionth of a metre] will go very deep into your lung and has the potential to do a lot of damage,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 particle that is much larger, perhaps a few microns long, will settle in your upper respiratory tract. It might have health effects, but they鈥檙e going to be less severe.鈥

Siegel plans to conduct what he calls 鈥渇ilter forensics,鈥 examining used filters from residential forced air heating and cooling systems. The CFI-funded equipment will allow him to extract filter dust, which can be invisible to the naked eye, and study it. The data collected can be combined with more easily generated chemical and biological data to make more realistic predictions about people鈥檚 long-term exposure to indoor particles.

The funding for Siegel鈥檚 project, and those of the other researchers, comes from CFI鈥檚 John R. Evans Leaders Fund, previously called the Leaders Opportunity Fund. The agency recently renamed the fund in honour of former 管家婆免费开奖大全 president Evans, who was also CFI鈥檚 first board chair.

鈥淐ongratulations to all the winners,鈥 said Professor Paul Young, 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 vice-president of research and innovation. 鈥淐FI funding has been essential to our ability to attract the world鈥檚 best researchers, and has, in turn, allowed those researchers to make progress on some of the most pressing problems of our time.鈥

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Jenny Hall is a writer with the Office of the Vice-President, Research & Innovation at the 管家婆免费开奖大全

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