时文阅读——PM 2.5是什么?
(2013-03-19 08:11:11)| 标签: pm2.5空气污染健康教育 | 分类: 时文阅读 | 
There are things floating
around in the air. Most of them, you cannot even see. They are a
kind of air pollution called particles or particulate matter. In
fact, particulate matter may be the air pollutant that most
commonly affects people's health.
Have a Look.
Particles can come in almost any shape or size, and can be solid
particles or liquid droplets. We divide particles into two major
groups. These groups differ in many ways. One of the differences is
size, we call the bigger particles PM10 and we call the smaller
particles PM2.5.
BIG. The big particles are between 2.5 and 10 micrometers
(from about 25 to 100 times thinner than a human hair). These
particles are called PM10 (we say "P M ten", which stands for
Particulate Matter up to 10 micrometers in size). These particles
cause less severe health effects.
SMALL. The small particles are smaller than 2.5 micrometers
(100 times thinner than a human hair). These particles are called
PM2.5 (we say "P M two point five", as in Particulate Matter up to
2.5 micrometers in size).
Where particulate matter comes from ...
Size isn't the only difference. Each type of particle is made of different material and comes from different places.
|   | 
 | 
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| What they | 
 | 
 | |
| How they’re | crushing and grinding rocks and soil then blown by wind | 
 | |
These particles get around.
| Which particles do you think travel farther? | ||
| PM10 (big) | OR | PM2.5 (small) | 
| How far do you think PM10 particles can travel? | ||
| 100 feet | 25 miles | 500 miles | 
| How far do you think PM2.5 particles can travel? | ||
| 100 feet | 25 miles | 500 miles | 
The smaller particles are lighter and they stay in the air longer
and travel farther. PM10 (big) particles can stay in the air for
minutes or hours while PM2.5 (small) particles can stay in the air
for days or weeks. And travel? PM10 particles can travel as little
as a hundred yards or as much as 30 miles. PM2.5 particles go even
farther; many hundreds of miles.
Particulate Matter and Your
Health
Getting into your body.
When you inhale, you breathe in air along with any particles that
are in the air. The air and the particles travel into your
respiratory system (your lungs and airway). Along the way the
particles can stick to the sides of the airway or travel deeper
into the lungs.
The farther particles go, the worse the effect.
| Which particles can go farther into the lungs? | ||
| PM10 (big) | OR | PM2.5 (small) | 
Answer: the smaller
PM2.5 particles. Smaller particles can pass through the smaller
airways. Bigger particles are more likely to stick to the sides or
get wedged into one of the narrow passages deep in the lung.
Other factors that affect how deep into the lungs particles can
go:
- Mouth or nose breathing. Breathing through your mouth allows particles to travel deeper into your lungs.
- Exercise. While exercising, particles can travel deeper.
- Age. Older people breath less deeply so particles may not get as deep.
- Lung disease. If lung diseases block the airway, particles will not travel as far.
- Weather (temperature).
- Other pollutants in the
air.
Your body responds to the particulate invasion!
Your lungs produce mucous to trap the particles, and tiny hairs
wiggle to move the mucous and particles out of the lung. You may
notice something in the back of your throat (this is the mucous);
the mucous leaves the airway by coughing or swallowing. If the
particle is small and it gets very far into the lungs, special
cells in the lung trap the particles and then they can't get out
and this can result in lung disease, emphysema, lung cancer.
Health Effects
Both PM10 (big) and PM2.5 (small) particles can cause health
problems; specifically respiratory health (that's the lungs and
airway). Because the PM2.5 travels deeper into the lungs AND
because the PM2.5 is made up things that are more toxic
(like heavy metals and cancer causing organic compounds), PM2.5 can
have worse health effects than the bigger PM10.
Exposure to particulate matter leads to increased use of medication
and more visits to the doctor or emergency room. Health effects
include the following:
- Coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath
- Aggravated asthma
- Lung damage (including decreased lung function and lifelong respiratory disease)
- Premature death in individuals with existing heart or lung diseases
Particulate Matter -- Air
Quality Index (AQI) and Health Concerns 
| AQI Values | Air Quality Descriptor | Health Concerns* | |
| PM2.5 | PM10 | ||
| 0 -
50 | Good | None | None | 
| 51 -
100** | Moderate | None | None | 
| 101 - 150 | Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups | People with respiratory or
heart disease, the elderly, and children should limit prolonged
exertion. | People with respiratory disease, such as asthma, should limit outdoor exertion. | 
| 151 - 200 | Unhealthy | People with respiratory or heart disease, the elderly, and children should avoid prolonged exertion; everyone else should limit prolonged exertion. | People with respiratory
disease, such as asthma, should avoid outdoor exertion; everyone
else, especially the elderly and children, should limit prolonged
outdoor exertion. | 
| 201 - 300 | Very Unhealthy | People with respiratory or heart disease, the elderly, and children should avoid any outdoor activity; everyone else should avoid prolonged exertion. | People with respiratory
disease, such as asthma, should avoid any outdoor activity;
everyone else, especially the elderly and children, should limit
outdoor exertion. | 
| 301 - 500 | Hazardous | Everyone should avoid any outdoor exertion; people with respiratory or heart disease, the elderly, and children should remain indoors. | Everyone should avoid any outdoor exertion; people with respiratory disease, such as asthma, should remain indoors. | 
| * PM has two sets of cautionary statements, which correspond to the two sizes of PM that are measured: | |
| • Particles up to 2.5
micrometers in diameter (PM2.5) • Particles up to 10 micrometers in diameter (PM10) | |
| ** | • An AQI of 100 for
PM2.5
corresponds to a PM2.5 level of
40 micrograms per cubic meter (averaged over 24 hours). • An AQI of 100 for PM10 corresponds to a PM10 level of 150 micrograms per cubic meter (averaged over 24 hours). | 

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