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University of Colorado at Boulder

31/07/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/08/2024 02:13

Rooftop science: Surveying Denver’s air

ASCENT sites piggyback on existing monitoring stations that have been collecting air quality samples for years. La Casais managed by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE). Northeast of downtown Denver, the site sits in the middle of a neighborhood with homes, shops, and industrial activity near the intersection of three interstate freeways. The site also hosts the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), both agencies measure PM2.5 concentrations, gas pollutants, ozone levels, and meteorology.

"This network may help push forward the next generation of air quality measuring," said Day. "Governments may adopt these instruments in the future if these efforts show the value of measurements."

After inspecting the hardware on the roof, Yun and Day descend the steep ladder back to the ground and step inside the tiny building. In a crowded corner, ASCENT instruments hum as they sort and digest the air from outside. Yun turns to a visual graph sorting the chemical compositions in real-time: green lines on the graph indicate organics and blue highlights nitrate.

"Monitoring the chemical composition of aerosols is crucial for air quality management, as it helps to understand different sources," said Yun. "Organic aerosols originate from both natural sources and anthropogenic activities, including vehicle emissions, food cooking, and industrial processes, such as refineries. In urban areas, these aerosols are particularly significant."

The Jimenez Group typically embarks on shorter projects that measure air quality for weeks rather than years, often in international locations. Day says everyone is excited to be involved in a project that will span years here in Colorado's Front Range. Three years in, the scientists have worked out the kinks related to instrument operations, and now are diving into the science to understand what it all means.

Day estimates about 80 percent of the data will contribute to research related to health, specifically air quality impacts. The other 20 percent will further scientific understanding of particles' effects on clouds, climate, and visibility.

"Aerosol sources and pollution in Denver consists of a complex and changing mixture from different sources - such as industry, vehicles, wildfires, oil and gas extraction, agriculture, cooking, fireworks, and vegetation sources," said Day. "We are excited to leverage this novel combination of chemical specificity, high time resolution, and long-term record, to help get a better handle on the sources that control Denver and Front Range air quality."