2022

Author(s): He JY, Huang CH, Yuan NS, Austin E, Seto E, Novosselov I

The increased frequency of wildfires in the Western United States has raised public awareness of the impact of wildfire smoke on air quality and human health. Exposure to wildfire smoke has been linked to an increased risk of cancer and cardiorespiratory morbidity. Evidence-driven interventions can alleviate the adverse health impact of wildfire smoke. During wildfires, public health guidance is based on regional air quality data with limited spatiotemporal resolution. Recently, low-cost air quality sensors have been used in air quality studies, given their ability to capture high-resolution spatiotemporal data. We demonstrate the use of a network of low-cost particulate matter (PM) sensors to gather indoor and outdoor PM2.5 data from seven locations in the urban Seattle area, along with a personal exposure monitor worn by a resident living in one of these locations during the 2020 Washington wildfire event. The data were used to determine PM concentration indoor/outdoor (I/O) ratios, PM reduction, and personal exposure levels. The result shows that locations equipped with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters and HVAC filtration systems had significantly lower I/O ratios (median I/O = 0.43) than those without air filtration (median I/O = 0.82). The median PM2.5 reduction for the locations with HEPA is 58% compared to 20% for the locations without HEPA. The outdoor PM sensor showed a high correlation to the nearby regional air quality monitoring stations (pre-calibration R-2 = 0.92). The personal monitor showed higher variance in PM measurements as the user moved through different microenvironments and could not be fully characterized by the network of indoor or outdoor monitors. The findings imply that evidence-based interventions can be developed to reduce pollution exposure when combining data from indoor and outdoor sensors. Personal exposure monitoring captured temporal spikes in PM exposure.

DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2022.119244