1 research outputs found
The Effect of Human Occupancy on Indoor Air Quality through Real-Time Measurements of Key Pollutants
The primarily emitted compounds by human presence, e.g.,
skin and
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in breath, can react with typical
indoor air oxidants, ozone (O3), and hydroxyl radicals
(OH), leading to secondary organic compounds. Nevertheless, our understanding
about the formation processes of the compounds through reactions of
indoor air oxidants with primary emitted pollutants is still incomplete.
In this study we performed real-time measurements of nitrous acid
(HONO), nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2), O3, and VOCs to investigate the contribution
of human presence and human activity, e.g., mopping the floor, to
secondary organic compounds. During human occupancy a significant
increase was observed of 1-butene, isoprene, and d-limonene exhaled by the four adults in the room and an increase
of methyl vinyl ketone/methacrolein, methylglyoxal, and 3-methylfuran,
formed as secondary compounds through reactions of OH radicals with
isoprene. Intriguingly, the level of some compounds (e.g., m/z 126, 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one, m/z 152, dihydrocarvone, and m/z 194, geranyl acetone) formed through reactions
of O3 with the primary compounds was higher in the presence
of four adults than during the period of mopping the floor with commercial
detergent. These results indicate that human presence can additionally
degrade the indoor air quality
