661 research outputs found

    An analysis of degradation in low-cost particulate matter sensors

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    Low-cost sensors (LCS) are increasingly being used to measure fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations in cities around the world. One of the most commonly deployed LCS is the PurpleAir with about 15,000 sensors deployed in the United States. However, the change in sensor performance over time has not been well studied. It is important to understand the lifespan of these sensors to determine when they should be replaced, and when measurements from these devices should or should not be used for various applications. This paper fills in this gap by leveraging the fact that: 1) Each PurpleAir sensor is comprised of two identical sensors and the divergence between their measurements can be observed, and 2) There are numerous PurpleAir sensors within 50 meters of regulatory monitors allowing for the comparison of measurements between these two instruments. We propose empirically-derived degradation outcomes for the PurpleAir sensors and evaluate how these outcomes change over time. On average, we find that the number of 'flagged' measurements, where the two sensors within each PurpleAir disagree, increases in time to 4 percent after 4 years of operation. Approximately, 2 percent of all PurpleAir sensors were permanently degraded. The largest fraction of permanently degraded PurpleAir sensors appeared to be in the hot and humid climate zone, suggesting that the sensors in this zone may need to be replaced sooner. We also find that the bias of PurpleAir sensors, or the difference between corrected PM2.5 levels and the corresponding reference measurements, changed over time by -0.12 ug/m3 (95% CI: -0.13 ug/m3, -0.11 ug/m3) per year. The average bias increases dramatically after 3.5 years. Climate zone is a significant modifier of the association between degradation outcomes and time.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures, 4 table

    Nonlocal boundary conditions for corrugated acoustic metasurface with strong near field interactions

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    The propagation of long-wavelength sound in the presence of a metasurface made by arranging acoustic resonators periodically upon or slightly above an impervious substrate is studied. The method of two-scale asymptotic homogenization is used to derive effective boundary conditions, which account for both the surface corrugation and the low-frequency resonance. This method is applied to periodic arrays of resonators of any shape operating in the long-wavelength regime. The approach relies on the existence of a locally periodic boundary layer developed in the vicinity of the metasurface, where strong near-field interactions of the resonators with each other and with the substrate take place. These local effects give rise to an effective surface admittance supplemented by nonlocal contributions from the simple and double gradients of the pressure at the surface. These phenomena are illustrated for the periodic array of cylindrical Helmholtz resonators with an extended inner duct. Effects of the centre-to-centre spacing and orientation of the resonators' opening on the nonlocality and apparent resonance frequency are studied. The model could be used to design metasurfaces with specific effective boundary conditions required for particular applications

    Surveillance System for Infectious Diseases of Pets, Santiago, Chile

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    Pet diseases may pose risks to human health but are rarely included in surveillance systems. A pilot surveillance system of pet infectious diseases in Santiago, Chile, found that 4 canine and 3 feline diseases accounted for 90.1% and 98.4% of notifications, respectively. Data also suggested association between poverty and pet diseases

    Early inflammatory markers in elicitation of allergic contact dermatitis

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    BACKGROUND: Allergic Contact Dermatitis (ACD) is regarded as a T-cell-mediated delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction. We studied the kinetics of the expression of CS-1 fibronectin, thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (CCL17/ TARC) and different chemokine receptors (CR) in skin biopsies from individuals suffering from back problems, with the antigen responsible of their contact dermatitis and an irrelevant antigen. METHODS: Samples were taken at 2, 10, and 48 hours for histological and immunohistochemical studies using monoclonal antibodies against human CS-1 fibronectin, CCL17, CD3, CD68, CD49d, CXCR3, CCR5, and CCR3. RESULTS: At positive antigen stimulated sites there was an early expression of CS-1 fibronectin (2 hours), followed by CCL17 and a later accumulation of alplha4/beta1+ (CD49d), CD3+, CD68+, CXCR3+ and CCR5+ mononuclear cells. At 48 hours, approximately 59 % of infiltrating cells were CXCR3+, 42% CCR5+, and only 14 % CCR3+. CONCLUSIONS: These results showed for the first time a very early expression of CS-1 fibronectin which preceded production of CCL17 in blood endothelial cells (BCEs) from patients' skin with ACD. The role of these molecules in recruitment of monocytes and effector T cells in ACD is discussed
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