3.1. Indoor Environmental Quality Evaluation for Typical Pollutants from the Random Families of University Staff
According to the “indoor air quality standards” (GB/T 18883-2002) (hereafter referred to as the standard), the limited concentration of formaldehyde and TVOC in the air were 0.10 mg·m
−3 and 0.60 mg·m
−3, respectively. The overall situation at the university was as follows: Firstly, about 80% of the monitoring points for formaldehyde and TVOC exceeded the standard. Second, the revealed ratios of formaldehyde were in the following order: Kitchen (79%) > bedroom (77%) > living room (74%). Third, the revealed ratios of TVOC of the living room, bedroom, and kitchen were 81%, 79%, and 78%, respectively. In order to test whether the data came from the same distribution, the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, which is a non-parametric test and independent of the distribution hypothesis, was adopted for the two samples. H
0: The data of the two samples were subject to the same distribution. H
1: The data of both samples were not from the same distribution. If the
p value was less than 0.05, the original hypothesis could be rejected, otherwise the original hypothesis needed to be accepted, and the two-sample data were subjected to the same distribution. The
p values, as shown in
Table 1, demonstrated no significant statistical difference (
p > 0.05) and all concentration series of the same pollutant were from the same distribution. But the environmental temperature, humidity, ventilation, illumination, and other factors, in the three types of spaces had a certain degree of representativeness, all of which may affect formaldehyde volatilization [
31].
As shown in
Table 2, the value range of pollutant concentrations was large, and the standard deviation was higher, which was mainly due to the individuality of the sampling points. The median was chosen to represent the level of formaldehyde, which was determined to be: Kitchens (0.16 mg·m
−3) > bedrooms (0.15 mg·m
−3) > living rooms (0.13 mg·m
−3). The concentrations of TVOC generally exceeded that of the standard by 2 or 3 times. Furthermore, the bedroom pollution was relatively more serious than the other places pollution.
The results of the dB index method were relatively clear, as shown in
Table 3. The results showed 84.6% of the bedrooms, 93.5% of the living rooms and 96.5% of the kitchens were located within the long-term tolerable concentration range that was deemed as unsuitable for people. Regarding adapted persons, the evaluation results were somewhat better: 61.2% in the living rooms, 53.8% in the bedrooms, and 51.7% in the kitchens, which were within the long-term allowable concentration range. In a long-term situation, percentage dissatisfaction (PDA) would only be 20–30%, and the probability of the Sick Building Syndrome would be higher, which could cause adverse reactions, such as fatigue, drowsiness, headache, dyspnea, irritation of the respiratory tract mucosa, and asthma. In addition, for people with respiratory diseases, the “decitvoc” values should be controlled to within 30 dB. If TVOC is determined by flame ionization method, the evaluation result may float up and down within one evaluation interval. In fact, the basis of the evaluation method was mainly settled by Molhave. In view of the research findings of Molhave in 1991, PID is a new method developed in the last 20 years as a fast detection method with very high accuracy in terms of ppm level, and no selectivity. It seems to be more consistent with the original hypothesis of Molhave [
17]. However, the studies for the concept, detection and evaluation of TVOC are still not perfect, and need further research.
3.2. Health Risk Assessment
Considering the nature of unit risk, the health risk (probability) is a result of long-time exposure to chemicals throughout one’s life. In order to more completely show the indoor exposure to health risks of the studied staff, the study specifically set up 40 workplaces to calculate the health risks. The 40 workplaces included 24 classrooms and 16 offices or duty rooms. The average of the formaldehyde concentrations in these workplaces was about 0.03 mg·m−3, which may be because the university adopted a centralized office form and the decoration materials were mainly aluminum alloy and organic glass.
The USEPA IRIS system’s URF value of formaldehyde is 0.000013 m
3·g
−1. According to our research, the weight of adult males and adult females were 72.8 kg and 56.2 kg, respectively, and referring to a report on the behavior patterns of Chinese people’s environmental exposure (volume) the respiratory rate of adult males and adult females were given as 18 m
3·day
−1 and 14.5 m
3·day
−1, respectively. Therefore, Chinese adult male carcinogenic slope factor was 0.053 kg·day·mg
−1, and that of a female was 0.050 kg·day·mg
−1. Exposure times are shown in
Table 4 and
Table 5.
It can be concluded that the health risk of formaldehyde was mainly determined by exposure time and exposure concentration, calculated using Equations (2)–(4). As shown in
Table 4 and
Table 5, the annual daily average of the exposure time was in the following order: Bedrooms > living rooms > workplaces > kitchens. The exposure time of adult females was significantly more than that of adult males, which was related to Chinese living habits. Therefore, women should be more aware of environmental pollution in the kitchen.
As shown in
Table 6, the health risks all exceeded the acceptable USEPA risk threshold (1.00 × 10
−6). The total average health risks for males and females were all about 0.0014. The contribution of the home environment to the overall average health risk is about 96%. Therefore, this study carried on the specific research and analysis of the home environment. The average health risks of formaldehyde were in the following order: Bedrooms > living rooms > kitchens > workplaces.
Generally speaking, the pollution in the three kinds of spaces were caused by different pollution sources and environmental factors. The micro-environment in the kitchen space was that they were small, quite damp, and had poor ventilation. Pollutant sources included smoke, gas, chemicals (such as detergents, pesticides, etc.), and volatile gas from decorative materials, as well as biological metabolic gases [
32]. Comparing the bedrooms and living rooms, the bedroom environments were higher in temperature and had a large number of decorations, with furniture and furnishings. In addition, there were a number of leather materials, home textiles, clothing, artificial boards, soft packages, cosmetics, and other pharmacy and hygiene items [
33], all of which resulted in a large amount of volatile organic pollutants. The temperature and humidity were suitable for the growth of mites, bacteria, and other microorganisms. Mildew, corruption, and other microbial metabolisms facilitated the volatilization of contaminants from materials. Compared to the bedrooms and kitchens, the living rooms were larger, better ventilated, and much brighter. The main pollutants were from the TV cabinet, sofa, wallpaper, wall paint, and other furniture materials [
34,
35,
36].
There were some systematic errors in the abovementioned health risk assessments, which were mainly reflected in the concentrations of pollutants. At present, the indoor formaldehyde health risk assessment of a large sample is usually in accordance with the “indoor air quality monitoring technology standard” (HJ/T 167-2004). The concentration of pollutants in rooms that were closed for 12 h was used to replace the exposure concentration, but there were some differences between them. There was a system error between the risk and true values [
37] due to the adopted national standard of 12 h as the “close time”. On the other hand, domestic researchers generally adopt the acceptable safety threshold (10
−6) from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. There are different security thresholds, from 1.00 × 10
−6 to 1.00 × 10
−4, which have some influence on the evaluation results, as shown in
Table 6. The concentration limits of formaldehyde, calculated using different security thresholds, also have certain differences, ranging from 10
−4 to 10
−1 mg·m
−3. This also shows that there is a certain degree of compatibility between indoor air quality evaluation and health evaluations. It is important for China to study health risk assessments of indoor pollutants further.
3.3. Discussion on Evaluation Method of Indoor Pollutants Classification
At present, China’s current standards of “indoor air quality standards” (GB/T 18883-2002) refer to legislation in Australia, Canada, America and seven other countries and regions, in trials of indoor air qualities for residential and office buildings. Through investigation, the domestic and foreign standards are compared as follows: National standards for formaldehyde and TVOC are limited to 0.1 mg·m
−3 and 0.6 mg·m
−3, respectively; WHO limits formaldehyde to 0.1 mg·m
−3. Formaldehyde and TVOC in Japan are limited to 0.1 and 0.4 mg·m
−3, respectively. The formaldehyde standard in Norway is 0.06 mg·m
−3; formaldehyde cannot exceed 0.123 mg·m
−3 in Canada. In general, the limited concentration of formaldehyde is about 0.1 mg·m
−3, but the monitoring time range is different; the values of 1 h, 0.5 h, 24 h, and 1 h (on average) are for China, WHO, Japan, and Canada, respectively [
38]. Indoor air quality standard evaluation methods are easy to measure air quality, but cannot directly reflect the relationship between the concentrations of pollutants and harm to the human body [
39]. Comparison of national standard methods requires professionals to interpret data, and the evaluation results are affected by subjective factors and professional experience. Therefore, indoor air quality standard evaluation methods cannot meet the current needs of residents.
Based on previous literature regarding the concentration of formaldehyde–human body reactions, formaldehyde concentration is divided into the following sections, according to the reaction of formaldehyde inhalation, as shown in
Table 7. According to relevant interviews and investigations, TVOC and formaldehyde concentrations were chosen as the evaluation indices of indoor environmental quality, and a rough classification evaluation scheme, combining air quality and pollution control, was put forward (
Table 8).
With a formaldehyde concentration of 0.05 mg·m
−3, human brain waves begin to appear abnormal; at 0.10 mg·m
−3, the national standard value, the body begins to perceive the smell and feel uncomfortable; at 0.20 mg·m
−3, the body begins to produce strong olfactory stimuli, and the eyes, nose, throat and upper respiratory tract are heavily irritated [
40].
Decitvoc: 30 dB, a concentration of about 0.2 mg·m
−3 is the allowable limited concentration for adapted persons, while asthma patients may feel uncomfortable [
41]; 54 dB, a concentration of about 0.6 mg·m
−3, is the national TVOC standard and the allowable limit concentration for asthma patients in adapted persons; 67 dB, a concentration of about 1.04 mg·m
−3, is the long term tolerable range for adapted persons, when 30% of people have difficulty breathing (PDA = 30%).
In the abovementioned classification program, Level A is clean. Level B does not exceed the national standard, but normal ventilation needs to be protected by place green plants and improving indoor air quality. Level C is slight pollution, where the main pollutants are TVOC. Level D is polluted, where the main pollutant is formaldehyde. Level C and Level D need to identify the source of pollution, focusing on the main source for pollution control. Level E needs all-around comprehensive management, focusing on decoration materials the pollution source control, supplemented by an activated carbon package and photo-catalysts to reduce the formaldehyde concentrations in the internal spaces of furniture.
3.4. Analysis of Pollution Release Source
With respect to furniture wood, as shown in
Table 9, the organic pollution problem in the interior space of furniture was very prominent. It can be seen from the table that the concentration of pollutants in the interior of the furniture was similar to that of the external environment, such as in wardrobes, TV cabinet drawers, and computer desk drawer [
42,
43]. Due to the accumulation of air pollution, the interior space of the less-used furniture becomes a potential repository of pollutants, such as atop bedroom cabinets, or cabinets and drawers near the ground, therefore, creating the possibility of short-term high concentrations of formaldehyde.
In daily life, formaldehyde is used as a raw material and industrial resin to produce furniture, home textiles, and decoration materials [
44]. For example, particleboard is made up of a variety of organic chemicals (adhesives, curing agents, waterproofing agents, and others) and dry wood chips, by mixing them and pressing them into boards [
45]. There are three main sources of indoor formaldehyde: Firstly, free-formaldehyde in decorative volatile materials in rooms; second, during plate hot-pressing of manufactured-wood furniture, adhesives are incompletely stabilized, and other oxygenated organic compounds decompose. Third, the external environment, temperature, humidity, moisture, and microbial actions cause the release of stabilized formaldehyde from materials. According to the current national standard “of China’s wood-based panel interior decoration materials and products in limited release formaldehyde” (GB 18580-2001), wood-based panels with high formaldehyde emissions need to be treated; however, it was found that the treatment could not completely solve the problem of organic pollution. In addition, some of the inside surfaces of furniture were not finished, and two plates were found to be bonded using adhesive, resulting in a high concentration of pollutant enrichment in the interior space of furniture. Although there is no systematic and quantitative research on the volatilization of pollutants in furniture interiors, preliminary conclusions could be drawn that there were three important means of preventing and controlling indoor organic pollution: The purchase of green products, to remove furniture interior pollution, and to create a good diffusion within indoor environments.