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Conference programme at a glance (pdf)

Oral presentations will have a duration of approximately 20 minutes. Keynote speakers will have 45 minutes for their presentations. At the end of each oral presentation 5 minutes will be reserved for discussions.

Poster presentations will be given equal prominence and ample time will be allowed for discussion.

If your contribution is submitted before Friday April 4, 2025, we will be able to include your contribution in the scientific programme and Book of Abstract.

Find instructions for preparation of the one-page abstract here.

 

Lorenz Armbruster, TSU – Verein für Technische Sicherheit und Umweltschutz e.V., Gotha, Germany: The evolution of the inhalability convention.

Philippe Duquenne, INRS, Nancy, France:
Measurement methods and strategies for airborne biological agents at the workplace: future challenges in a prevention context.

Marta Gabriel, Institute of Science and Innovation in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering (INEGI), Porto, Portugal:
From IAQ monitoring to risk mitigation: Developing data-driven action plans for healthier buildings.

Jesús Pérez Gil, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain:
The pulmonary surfactant system as target and dealer of inhaled airborne materials.

Amir Hossein Hassani, NILU, Kjeller, Norway:
The role of novel (low-cost) sensor technologies in air quality monitoring and exposure assessment.

Pramod Kulkarni, NIOSH, Cincinnati, USA:
Development of field-portable real-time instrumentation for aerosol chemical speciation.

Teemu Lepistö, Tampere University, Finland:
Particle lung deposited surface area (LDSA) as an additional metric for fine particle pollution monitoring: Location-dependency, potential health-relevance and measurement methodologies.

Carsten Möhlmann, IFA, Saint Augustin, Germany:
Aerosol sampling – from the past over the present to the future.

Paul Scheepers, Radboud Institute for Biological and Environmental Sciences,
Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands: Biological guidance values and exposure mitigation. Where biomonitoring can make the difference to protect the health of workers.

Giovanna Tranfo, INAIL, Rome, Italy:
Planning and conducting HBM studies for exposure to chemicals.

Jun Wang, University of Cincinnati, USA:
Enhancing workplace exposure assessment and control with artificial intelligence.

Lorenz Armbruster, TSU – Verein für Technische Sicherheit und Umweltschutz e.V., Gotha, Germany:
Behaviour of particles in the human respiratory tract and in sampling instruments.

Philippe Duquenne, INRS, Nancy, France:
Measurement strategies for airborne biological agents at the workplace.

Jesús Pérez Gil, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain:
Pulmonary surfactants and the fate of inhaled particulate matter.

Amir Hossein Hassani, NILU, Kjeller, Norway:
Low-cost sensors for air quality monitoring.

Pramod Kulkarni, NIOSH, Cincinnati, USA:
Title to be confirmed.

Carsten Möhlmann, IFA, Saint Augustin, Germany:
Occupational exposure monitoring: samplers and monitors for particles.

Paul Scheepers, Radboud Institute for Biological and Environmental Sciences,
Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands: Biomonitoring, more than the analysis of biomarkers.

Giovanna Tranfo, INAIL, Rome, Italy:
Human biomonitoring basics.

Jun Wang, University of Cincinnati, USA:
Sampling, analysis, and monitoring emerging air pollutants in workplace.