Australia Advances Series - Personal Air Monitor
http://www.csiro.au/promos/ozadvances/
Introduction to 'Personal Air Monitor - Australia Advances video'.
effects of this pollution of the atmosphere include damage to the ozone layer
Air pollution is everywhere. Pouring out of car exhausts,
factories and from burnoffs. Most monitoring of air pollution is
conducted outside, but statistics show in fact that Australians
spend 95 per cent of their time inside... and this is where
pollutants could be silently causing problems.
Dr. Tom Beer, a CSIRO scientist, from the Division of
Atmospheric Research, was interested in discovering what the
most heavily polluted areas he encountered during a normal day
were. So he devised a personal air pollution sampler which he
wore for 20 weeks during his normal day to day activities.
He found from his sampler that nitrogen dioxide, which
forms whenever fossil fuels such as natural gas or petrol burn,
read at 16 parts per billion outside on a normal busy street. And
as soon as he went inside his home, the reading dropped to 12
parts per billion. However in the kitchen, where there is a gas
stove, the reading leapt to 32 parts per billion, twice the
reading outside the house.
DR. Tom Beer, CSIRO: "I see these being used in any
situation where workers may be exposed to nitrogen dioxide and
typical examples of that would be chefs working in an industrial
kitchen, or workers in factories that have gas fired boilers. We
have similar passive gas samplers that can measure ozone, that
can measure sulphur dioxide, that can measure formaldehyde."
There are currently two thousand samplers being worn
around the world. The information collected from these will be
used by environmental managers to ensure that we have clean air
inside as well as outside.
Email Dr. Tom Beer
For more information on Personal Air Monitor please contact:
Dr Tom Beer
CSIRO Division of Atmospheric Research
PMB 1
Aspendale 3195