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Nitroaromatic carcinogens in diesel soot: A review of laboratory findings

E.T. Wei and H.P. Shu

American Journal of Public Health, 1983, vol. 73, issue 9, 1085-1088

Abstract: The automobile industry plans to increase production of diesel-powered passenger cars because diesel engines provide better fuel economy than conventional gasoline engines. Diesel engines, however, produce more soot, and increased use of diesel cars will result in more discharge of diesel soot into the atmosphere. Recently, a new class of chemicals, called nitroaromatic compounds, have been identified in chemical extracts of diesel soot. Some of these nitroaromatic compounds produce mutations when tested in in vitro bacterial and mammalian cell assays, and cancer when tested in animals. Here, we review the relevance of these new laboratory findings to current deliberations over emission standards for particles from diesel cars.

Date: 1983
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1983:73:9:1085-1088_8

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