野火烟雾对加利福尼亚室内空气质量的影响使用众包数据进行评估

Yutong Liang, Deep Sengupta, M. Campmier, David M. Lunderberg, J. Apte, A. Goldstein
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引用次数: 55

摘要

野火是美国西部颗粒物(PM2.5)的一个越来越大的来源。以前对野火烟雾颗粒暴露的描述主要基于室外PM2.5浓度。由于人们在烟雾事件期间主要躲在室内,因此野火PM2.5渗入建筑物决定了暴露程度。我们使用来自PurpleAir传感器网络的超过240万个传感器小时的数据,对加州1400多座建筑物的野火PM2.5渗透进行了分析。我们的研究表明,由于人们的行为变化,野火日PM2.5的入渗量比非火灾日大幅减少。这些结果提高了对野火颗粒暴露的认识,并有助于告知公众减少暴露的有效方法。野火已成为颗粒物(PM2.5 < 2.5-µm直径)的重要来源,导致美国西部出现不健康的空气质量指数。由于在野火烟雾事件期间,人们主要躲在室内,因此野火PM2.5渗入室内环境是人类暴露的关键决定因素,并且通过适当的意识、基础设施投资和公众教育是可以控制的。利用来自加州众包PurpleAir传感器网络的1400多座建筑物内外的时间分辨观测数据,我们发现几何平均渗透比(室外来源的室内PM2.5 /室外PM2.5)从非火灾日的0.4降低到野火日的0.2。即使减少了入渗,在野火事件期间,PM2.5的平均室内浓度几乎增加了两倍,较新的建筑物和使用空调或过滤的建筑物的入渗量较低。
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Wildfire smoke impacts on indoor air quality assessed using crowdsourced data in California
Significance Wildfires are an increasingly large source of particulate matter (PM2.5) in the western United States. Previous characterizations of exposure to wildfire smoke particles were based mainly on outdoor concentrations of PM2.5. Since people mainly shelter indoors during smoke events, the infiltration of wildfire PM2.5 into buildings determines exposure. We present analysis of infiltration of wildfire PM2.5 into more than 1,400 buildings in California using more than 2.4 million sensor hours of data from the PurpleAir sensor network. Our study reveals that infiltration of PM2.5 during wildfire days was substantially reduced compared with non-fire days, due to people’s behavioral changes. These results improve understanding of exposure to wildfire particles and facilitate informing the public about effective ways to reduce their exposure. Wildfires have become an important source of particulate matter (PM2.5 < 2.5-µm diameter), leading to unhealthy air quality index occurrences in the western United States. Since people mainly shelter indoors during wildfire smoke events, the infiltration of wildfire PM2.5 into indoor environments is a key determinant of human exposure and is potentially controllable with appropriate awareness, infrastructure investment, and public education. Using time-resolved observations outside and inside more than 1,400 buildings from the crowdsourced PurpleAir sensor network in California, we found that the geometric mean infiltration ratios (indoor PM2.5 of outdoor origin/outdoor PM2.5) were reduced from 0.4 during non-fire days to 0.2 during wildfire days. Even with reduced infiltration, the mean indoor concentration of PM2.5 nearly tripled during wildfire events, with a lower infiltration in newer buildings and those utilizing air conditioning or filtration.
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