The cause of Lioy’s death has yet to be determined, according to his wife Jean Lioy.
Dr. Lioy became one of the first scholars to gather samples of the dust from the ruins of New York’s Twin Towers, soon after he witnessed the 2001 terrorist attack, the New York Times reported. He scraped the samples from cars nearby laboratory testing, after Lioy noted the “weird texture and color” of the dust.
"It was unprecedented in terms of the complex characteristics of the materials released," Lioy told USA Today in 2011.
The results of laboratory analysis revealed the presence of elements including chromium, aluminum, barium, titanium, mercury and lead, as well as jet-fuel components and particles of wood, plastic, glass, asbestos and concrete.
The main aim of the research was to determine the nature of the cough that affected police officers, firefighters, construction workers, and Manhattan residents, a phenomenon later named “World Trade Center cough.”“In the first 48 hours, the government was concerned about asbestos being the primary threat,” he said.
But Lioy found out that cough wasn’t caused by asbestos, pointing out there were several other culprits for the adverse health effects. A primary one was that cement dust was “very alkaline,” with pH levels above 10, irritating the linings of the lungs, Lioy claimed. He also found “fibers stuck in people’s upper airways,” trapping the cement particles and exacerbating the irritation.
He received two lifetime achievement awards — the Wesolowski Award from the International Society of Exposure Analysis and the Frank Chambers Award from the Air and Waste Management Association.