Title: MEASUREMENT OF AIR POLLUTANTS
1MEASUREMENT OF AIR POLLUTANTS AIR QUALITY DATA
SETS
Chris Eiser Director Atmospheric Science NSW DEC
Short Course in Environmental Epidemiology and
the Atmospheric Environment The University of
Sydney 10 11 November 2003
2Structure of presentation
- Role of air pollutant measurements
- Ambient Indoor air quality
- Air quality standard frameworks
- Key pollutants, sources and trends
- Measurement networks techniques
- Data Sources and Quality
3Uses of air quality measurement data
- Characterise and report on air quality levels
- Identify, prioritise and track trends in
pollutants - Assess and track the effectiveness of programs
- Help form the basis of new control programs and
assess new developments - Provide information to researchers and the
community - Assess health impacts of pollutants
- Assess major source impacts
4The Air Quality Management Cycle the role of
air monitoring
5Data uses in policy
- Statutory reporting (SoE, ANEPM)
- Assessing effectiveness of existing control
strategies (Action for Air etc.) - Data to assist with computer simulation modelling
of growth and future potential control scenarios - Early advice on air quality trends and emerging
pollutants - Regular advice to Community on air quality (RPI,
24-hour data, Reports)
6Ambient Air Quality
7Ambient Air Quality - Key Pollutants
- Global Issues
- Greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4, N2O, CFCs)
- Ozone Depleting Substances
- Regional Issues
- Photochemical smog (Ozone)
- Brown Haze (Particles)
- Local Issues
- CO, NO2, SO2, Air Toxics, Odours
8National Ambient Air Quality Standards
ANEPM PM2.5 VARIATION (Reporting
Standards) 25µg/m3 (1 day average) 8 µg/m3 (1
year average)
9Ambient Air Quality - Key Sources
- Motor Vehicle exhaust and evaporation of fuel
- Large Industrial processes (eg oil refineries,
steelworks etc.) - Small Industrial and Commercial premises (eg
printers, dry-cleaners, smash repair shops etc. - Domestic premises (solid fuel heating, cleaning
products, lawn mowers etc.) - Biogenic emissions
10Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
11Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
12Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
13Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
14Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
15Anthropogenic emission sources - 2002
16Source contributions - air toxics
Greater Metropolitan Region 2000
17Ambient air quality trends
18Ambient air quality trends - Carbon Monoxide (CO)
19Ambient air quality trends - Lead (Pb)
20Ambient air quality trends - Ozone (1 hr)
21Ambient air quality trends - Ozone (1 Hr)
22Ambient air quality trends - Ozone (4 Hr)
23Ambient air quality trends - Ozone (4 Hr)
24Ambient air quality trends - Nitrogen Dioxide
(NO2)
25Ambient air quality trends - PM10
26Ambient air quality trends - PM10
27Ambient air quality trends - PM10
28Ambient air quality trends - fine particles
(PM2.5)
29Bushfire Impacts
30Benzene - Annual Average
Draft NEPM investigation level 3 ppbV
(annual avg)
31Toluene - Average and Maximum
Draft NEPM investigation level 2000 ppbV (24 hour
avg)
32Xylene - Average and Maximum
Draft NEPM investigation level 200 ppbV
(24 hour avg)
331,3-Butadiene Maximum Annual Average
United Kingdom goal (2003) 1
ppbV (annual avg)
34Ambient air monitoring network
35NSW ambient air monitoring network - GMR
36NSW ambient air monitoring networkrural sites
37Wollongong Site
38Monitoring Racks PCs
39CBD Site
40Wagga Wagga Site
41Measurement techniques
42CO Analyser Schematic
Non-dispersive IR Spectrophotometry
43SO2 Analyser Schematic
Pulsed Fluorescence Spectrophotometry
44NOx Analyser Schematic
Chemiluminescence
45Ozone Analyser Schematic
Ultraviolet Spectroscopy
46High-Volume Analyser Schematic
Gravimetric
47High-Volume Analyser
48TEOM PM10 Analyser Schematic
Particles less than 10 microns
49TEOM PM10 Mass Transducer Schematic
50USEPA Method TO14 Schematic
Volatile Organic Compounds
51AVOCS and Canister System
52Open path monitoring techniques
- FTIR - Fourier Transform Infra-Red
- LIDAR - Light Detection and Ranging
- DIAL - Differential Absorption LIDAR
- TDLAS - Tunable Diode Laser Absorption
Spectroscopy - DOAS - Differential Optical Absorption
Spectroscopy
53Open Path vs Single Point
Advantages Disadvantages
- Spectral interferences eg O2 on BTX
- Requires relatively. sophisticated data
processing - No absolute zero ref.
- Problems with heavy rain fog
- No contamination
- Simultaneous measurement of multiple components
- Near real-time for BTX
- Low maintenance
54DOAS
LAMP
RECEIVER
OPTICAL PATH 150 1000 m
WHEEL
SPECTROMETER
PMT
COMPUTER
55Installation at receiver end
56Data availability and quality
57Ambient air quality data availability
- Parameters
- Ozone
- Particles (PM10, PM2.5)
- Oxides of Nitrogen
- Carbon monoxide
- Sulfur dioxide
- Lead
- Air toxics (organics)
- Visibility
- Meteorology
- Averaging times
- 1 hour average
- 4-hour rolling avg
- 8-hour rolling avg
- 24-hour average
- Annual average
58Accuracy and precision guidelines
59Calibration procedures
60Air Quality Monitoring Network Data Flow
61INDOOR AIR QUALITY
62Indoor Air Quality - Key Pollutants
- Chemicals CO, CO2, NOx, SO2, Ozone, VOCs,
formaldehyde, ETS, pesticides, PAHs, metals - Physical agents particles, asbestos, man made
fibres, radon, EMF, noise - Biological and microbiological agents house dust
mites, dander from pets, fungi, bacteria,
mycotoxins - Ventilation, humidity
63Indoor Air Quality - Key Sources
- Emissions from building materials
- Ventilation practices and ventilation rate
- Building practices and cleaning habits
- Emissions from products used indoors
- Smoking
- Open combustion
- Body effluents
- Ambient air quality
64Interim national Indoor air quality Goals
Recommended By the NHMRC
65BTEX exposure standards local exposures
66 Personal exposure monitoring - Perth
Figure
Source BTEX Personal Exposure Pilot
Study Perth January 2001
67BTEX personal exposure study sampler
68European indoor/outdoor studies - benzene
69SUMMARY
- Ambient air measurements
- NSW DEC has a substantial investment in regional
ambient air quality monitoring and a rich data
set. - Substantial effort is expended in ensuring
network meets quality standards and uses
recognised monitoring protocols. - Data is made available via the web and through
data requests. - Technology is improving and demands for new
pollutants will challenge our ability to measure
them accurately
70SUMMARY (Contd)
- Indoor air measurements
- Not a new problem, but community awareness is
increasing - No clear framework for standard setting or
responsibility for taking action on indoor air
quality - Data is patchy but indicates several chemicals
are present in indoor air at higher levels than
outdoors - Broader range of chemicals and biological agents
in indoor air.
71Further Information ambient air quality
Regional Pollution Indices www.epa.nsw.gov.au/air/
airqual/aqupd.asp 24 hour Pollutant
Summary www.epa.nsw.gov.au/airqual/web24hsum.asp Q
uarterly Air Pollution Reports www.epa.nsw.gov.au/
air/datareports.htm
State of the Environment Report www.epa.nsw.gov.au
/soe2000/index.htm or purchase by phoning - 131
555 ANEPM Annual Reports www.ephc.gov.au/nepc/annu
al_report02.html
Air Pollution Measurement Practical
Course www.casanz.org
72Further Information indoor air quality
State of Knowledge Report Air Toxics Indoor
Air Quality in Australia www.ea.gov.au/atmosphere/
airtoxics/sok/index.html Indoor Air Quality in
Australia A Strategy for Action www.casanz.org.au
/pdf/Clean_Air_5.pdf Some selected overseas
websites USEPA www.epa.gov/iaq Europe www.jrc.c
ec.eu.int