Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Utah, 135 S 1460 E, Room 819, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA; Department of City & Metropolitan Planning, University of Utah, 375 S 1530 E, Suite 220, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA; University of Utah School of Medicine, Pulmonary Division, 26 N 1900 E, Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA.
Department of Political Science, University of Utah, 260 S Central Campus Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Jul 1;776:145778. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145778. Epub 2021 Feb 12.
The growing concern of air quality and its associated health-related impacts has led to increased awareness of pollutant exposure. Most human populations spend the majority of their time indoors and the COVID-19 pandemic has likely exacerbated this behavior. While significant amounts of research have focused on outdoor air quality, to date there have been no studies that examined simultaneous long-term trends on indoor and outdoor air quality on a site using research-grade sensors. We measured fine particulate matter (PM) for a year using sensors located on the rooftop, air handling room, and indoor office space in a building and captured the impacts of three types of regularly occurring elevated pollution events: wintertime atmospheric inversions, wildfires, and fireworks. The events had different magnitudes and durations, and infiltration rates varied for each event leading to dissimilar indoor air pollution levels. The building's air handling unit and different environmental conditions (lower indoor humidity and temperature during the winter) combined to reduce indoor pollution from inversion events however, particulate matter from wildfires and fireworks infiltrated at higher rates. Together, this suggests possible intervention strategies, such as ventilation rates and filter upgrades, that could be used to mitigate contaminant intrusion during elevated pollution events. This year-long study illustrates an array of ways that elevated pollution events interact with the protective effects that buildings have against air pollution for its occupants. Furthermore, we show that outdoor air pollution is an important variable to consider when studying indoor air quality as contaminant infiltration is strongly dependent on the specific pollution source.
空气质量及其相关健康影响的日益关注导致人们对污染物暴露的认识不断提高。大多数人群大部分时间都在室内度过,而 COVID-19 大流行可能加剧了这种行为。尽管大量研究集中在室外空气质量上,但迄今为止,还没有研究使用研究级传感器在一个地点同时检查室内和室外空气质量的长期趋势。我们使用位于屋顶、空气处理室和室内办公空间的传感器,对颗粒物进行了一年的测量,并捕获了三种经常发生的高污染事件的影响:冬季大气逆温、野火和烟花。这些事件的规模和持续时间不同,每个事件的渗透率也不同,导致室内空气污染水平不同。建筑物的空气处理机组和不同的环境条件(冬季室内湿度和温度较低)结合起来,减少了逆温事件造成的室内污染,但来自野火和烟花的颗粒物渗透速度更高。总之,这表明可能采取一些干预策略,例如通风率和过滤器升级,以减轻高污染事件期间污染物的入侵。这项为期一年的研究说明了一系列升高的污染事件与建筑物为其居住者提供的防空气污染保护作用相互作用的方式。此外,我们还表明,在研究室内空气质量时,室外空气污染是一个重要的变量,因为污染物渗透强烈依赖于特定的污染源。