利用室内和室外测量了解建筑物对野火、大气倒灌和烟花 PM2.5 污染事件的防护能力

Daniel L. Mendoza, Tabitha M. Benney, Erik T. Crosman, Ryan Bares, Derek V. Mallia, Cheryl S. Pirozzi, Andrew L. Freeman, Sarah Boll
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于远距离污染事件(如野火)的增加,全球室外污染事件的频率和严重程度都有所上升。我们研究了城市地区室内和室外空气质量之间的交叉点,使用研究级传感器,通过测试同一建筑物内两个独立的室内环境,探索 PM2.5 在各种污染事件中的渗透情况。我们证实了之前的研究结果,即建筑物室内环境在冬季反转事件中的保护作用最强,而在烟花爆竹和野火事件中的保护作用较弱。在不同的污染事件中,尤其是那些经过较长距离的污染事件(如野火)中,建筑物室内环境的保护能力有明显的不同,我们还发现了不同类型 PM2.5 的渗透率不同的证据。反转事件的渗透率最低(13-22%),其次是烟花爆竹(53-58%),而野火的渗透率最高(62-70%),远距离野火事件持续时间更长,因此比本地野火相关颗粒物的渗透持续时间更长。可吸入颗粒物渗透率的差异可能是多种因素共同作用的结果,包括不同的颗粒大小、浓度和化学性质。因此,在这种情况下,本地野火与远处野火污染对空气质量的时间影响是不同的。基于这些发现,室内空气质量似乎比室外空气质量更有利于采取保护措施和政策,因为建筑环境可以起到屏蔽室外空气的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using Indoor and Outdoor Measurements to Understand Building Protectiveness against Wildfire, Atmospheric Inversion, and Firework PM2.5 Pollution Events
The world has seen an increase in the frequency and severity of elevated outdoor pollution events exacerbated by the rise in distant polluting events (i.e., wildfires). We examined the intersection between indoor and outdoor air quality in an urban area using research-grade sensors to explore PM2.5 infiltration across a variety of pollution events by testing two separate indoor environments within the same building. We confirmed prior work suggesting that indoor environments in buildings are most protective during wintertime inversion events and less so during fireworks and wildfire events. The building indoor environment protectiveness varies notably during different pollution episodes, especially those that have traveled longer distances (e.g., wildfires), and we found evidence of varied infiltration rates across PM2.5 types. Inversion events have the lowest infiltration rates (13–22%), followed by fireworks (53–58%), and wildfires have the highest infiltration rates (62–70%), with distant wildfire events persisting longer and, therefore, infiltrating for greater durations than local-wildfire-related particle matter. The differences in PM infiltration rates were likely due to the combined effects of several factors, including varying particle size, concentration, and chemistry. Subsequently, the local wildfires had different temporal air quality impacts than distant wildfire pollution in this case. Based on these findings, indoor air quality appears more conducive to protective action and policies than outdoor air quality because the built environment may serve to shield individuals from outdoor air.
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