Publication | Open Access
Wildfire smoke impacts on indoor air quality assessed using crowdsourced data in California
181
Citations
40
References
2021
Year
Wildfires have become an important source of particulate matter (PM<sub>2.5</sub> < 2.5-µm diameter), leading to unhealthy air quality index occurrences in the western United States. Since people mainly shelter indoors during wildfire smoke events, the infiltration of wildfire PM<sub>2.5</sub> into indoor environments is a key determinant of human exposure and is potentially controllable with appropriate awareness, infrastructure investment, and public education. Using time-resolved observations outside and inside more than 1,400 buildings from the crowdsourced PurpleAir sensor network in California, we found that the geometric mean infiltration ratios (indoor PM<sub>2.5</sub> of outdoor origin/outdoor PM<sub>2.5</sub>) were reduced from 0.4 during non-fire days to 0.2 during wildfire days. Even with reduced infiltration, the mean indoor concentration of PM<sub>2.5</sub> nearly tripled during wildfire events, with a lower infiltration in newer buildings and those utilizing air conditioning or filtration.
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