scholarly journals Stationary and mobile particulate matter concentration measurement in Miskolc

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 338-344
Author(s):  
Csongor Báthory ◽  
Péter Pecsmány ◽  
Lajos Szalontai ◽  
Árpád Bence Palotás

A stationary and mobile device based on a low-cost dust sensor (Plantower PMS7003) was used to study particulate matter (PM) concentration in Miskolc. The stationary device was placed at the automatic monitoring station of the National Air Quality Measurement Network (OLM) in Martintelep, Miskolc. The mobile device was used to walk 4 streets along a square route with a total length of 800 m. Measurements were made on two days (September 9 and 11) between 7am and 9am, which according to preliminary experience coincided with the morning rush hour. The access route includes the OLM monitoring station, a busy road, two bypasses, a parking lot, and a smaller roadway blocked by traffic. The measured PM1, PM2.5, PM10 concentrations of the mobile device were interpolated on a circuit-by-circuit basis in ArcGIS, and conclusions were drawn for the area. The concentration of stationary and mobile devices was compared.

Author(s):  
Jarosław Tatarczak

This work presents measurement results of pollutants generated during 3D printing. The measure of pollutants is the concentration of particulate matter with a diameter of up to 2.5 μm (PM2,5). Materials acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), polyactide (PLA) for a 3D printer and low-cost particulate matter concentration sensors PMS3003, PMS7003 were used in the research. Research results show that  low-cost sensors can be useful for monitoring pollution during 3D printing in offices, laboratories or private homes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 02026
Author(s):  
Jan Drzymalla ◽  
Andreas Henne

Whether due to traffic, industry or private households – particulate matter enters our air every day and pollutes the air we breathe. When the term air pollution is used, hardly anyone ever thinks of the air inside their own home. However, many urban residences are located in the immediate vicinity of busy roads with high concentrations of particulate matter. Consequently, the outside concentration of fine dust has considerable influence on the indoor concentration. Given the fact that many people spend more than 90 % of their lifetime indoors, it is important to measure and understand particle transport from the outside to the inside in order to assess the effects of exposure to outdoor particles on human health. A two-room apartment near a main road in Leverkusen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany was used in the investigation in this research project. Particulate matter concentrations for PM2.5 and PM10 were measured simultaneously inside and outside of the building. Results are size-specific deposition rates, indoor/outdoor ratios and infiltration factors, which provide information on the relationship between internal and external concentrations and the associated health consequences. The particulate matter concentration was measured using low-cost PM-sensors, which were developed and calibrated within the scope of this research project.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 3008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sinan Sousan ◽  
Alyson Gray ◽  
Christopher Zuidema ◽  
Larissa Stebounova ◽  
Geb Thomas ◽  
...  

Deployment of low-cost sensors in the field is increasingly popular. However, each sensor requires on-site calibration to increase the accuracy of the measurements. We established a laboratory method, the Average Slope Method, to select sensors with similar response so that a single, on-site calibration for one sensor can be used for all other sensors. The laboratory method was performed with aerosolized salt. Based on linear regression, we calculated slopes for 100 particulate matter (PM) sensors, and 50% of the PM sensors fell within ±14% of the average slope. We then compared our Average Slope Method with an Individual Slope Method and concluded that our first method balanced convenience and precision for our application. Laboratory selection was tested in the field, where we deployed 40 PM sensors inside a heavy-manufacturing site at spatially optimal locations and performed a field calibration to calculate a slope for three PM sensors with a reference instrument at one location. The average slope was applied to all PM sensors for mass concentration calculations. The calculated percent differences in the field were similar to the laboratory results. Therefore, we established a method that reduces the time and cost associated with calibration of low-cost sensors in the field.


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 580
Author(s):  
Eyal Fattal ◽  
Hadas David-Saroussi ◽  
Ziv Klausner ◽  
Omri Buchman

The accumulated particulate matter concentration at a given vertical column due to traffic sources in urban area has many important consequences. This task, however, imposes a major challenge, since the problem of realistic pollutant dispersion in an urban environment is a very demanding task, both theoretically and computationally. This is mainly due to the highly inhomogeneous three dimensional turbulent flow regime in the urban canopy roughness sublayer, which is far from “local equilibrium” between shear production and dissipation. We present here a mass-consistent urban Lagrangian stochastic model for pollutants dispersion, where the flow field is modeled using a hybrid approach by which we model the surface layer based on the typical turbulent scales, both of the canopy and in the surface layer inertial sub-layer. In particular it relies on representing the canopy aerodynamically as a porous medium by spatial averaging the equations of motion, with the assumption that the canopy is laterally uniform on a scale much larger than the buildings but smaller than the urban block/neighbourhood, i.e., at the sub-urban-block scale. Choosing the spatial representative averaging volume allows the averaged variables to reflect the characteristic vertical heterogeneity of the canopy but to smooth out smaller scale spatial fluctuations caused as air flows in between the buildings. This modeling approach serves as the base for a realistic and efficient methodology for the calculation of the accumulated concentration from multiple traffic sources for any vertical column in the urban area. The existence of multiple traffic sources impose further difficulty since the computational effort required is very demanding for practical uses. Therefore, footprint analysis screening was introduced to identify the relevant part of the urban area which contributes to the chosen column. All the traffic sources in this footprint area where merged into several areal sources, further used for the evaluation of the concentration profile. This methodology was implemented for four cases in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area based on several selected summer climatological scenarios. We present different typical behaviors, demonstrating combination of source structure, urban morphology, flow characteristics, and the resultant dispersion pattern in each case.


2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 2140-2150
Author(s):  
V. Sreekanth ◽  
Meenakshi Kushwaha ◽  
Padmavati Kulkarni ◽  
Adithi R. Upadhya ◽  
B. Spandana ◽  
...  

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