Information about Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)
Condensed from Measuring Air Quality: The Pollutant Standards Index;
Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, US EPA; EPA 451/K-94-001;
February 1994.
Sources
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a light brown gas that can
become an important component of urban haze. Nitrogen oxides
usually enter the air as the result of high-temperature combustion
processes, such as those occurring in automobiles and power plants.
NO2 plays an important role in the atmospheric reactions that generate
ozone. Home heaters and gas stoves also produce substantial
amounts of NO2.
Health effects
Healthy individuals experience respiratory problems
when exposed to high levels of NO2 for short durations (less than
three hours). Asthmatics are especially sensitive, and changes in
airway responsiveness have been observed in some studies of
exercising asthmatics exposed to relatively low levels of NO2. Studies
also indicate a relationship between indoor NO2 exposures and
increased respiratory illness rates in young children, but definitive
results are still lacking. Many animal studies suggest that NO2 impairs
respiratory defense mechanisms and increases susceptibility to
infection.
Several studies also show that chronic exposure to relatively low NO2
pollution levels may cause structural changes in the lungs of animals.
These studies suggest that chronic exposure to NO2 could lead to
adverse health effects in humans, but specific levels and durations
likely to cause such effects have not yet been determined.
Air quality levels
The air quality standard for NO2, which is
designed to protect public health with an adequate margin of safety,
is 0.053 ppm, annual average. EPA is required to issue a public alert
when NO2 reaches 0.6 ppm on a one hour average, a public warning
when NO2 reaches 1.2 ppm, and a declaration of public emergency at
the level of 1.6 ppm. The significant harm level, at which serious and
widespread health effects occur to the general population, is 2.0 ppm
of NO2.
[ mail questions to: Susan Zimmer-Dauphinee, Ambient Monitoring Program | Back to AMP Homepage ]