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Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling

The impact of ventilation efficiency on radon ((222)Rn) and carbon dioxide (CO(2)) concentrations in the indoor air of a residential building was studied by applying transient data analysis within the CONTAM 3.4 program. Continuous measurements of (222)Rn and CO(2) concentrations, together with basi...

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Autores principales: Dovjak, Mateja, Vene, Ožbej, Vaupotič, Janja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8871573/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35206313
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042125
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author Dovjak, Mateja
Vene, Ožbej
Vaupotič, Janja
author_facet Dovjak, Mateja
Vene, Ožbej
Vaupotič, Janja
author_sort Dovjak, Mateja
collection PubMed
description The impact of ventilation efficiency on radon ((222)Rn) and carbon dioxide (CO(2)) concentrations in the indoor air of a residential building was studied by applying transient data analysis within the CONTAM 3.4 program. Continuous measurements of (222)Rn and CO(2) concentrations, together with basic meteorological parameters, were carried out in an apartment (floor area about 27 m(2)) located in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Throughout the experiment (October 3–15), frequent ventilation (several times per day), poor ventilation (once to twice per day) and no ventilation scenarios were applied, and the exact ventilation and occupancy schedule were recorded. Based on the measurements, a transient simulation of (222)Rn and CO(2) concentrations was performed for six sets of scenarios, where the design ventilation rate (DVR) varied based on the ventilation requirements and recommendations. On the days of frequent ventilation, a moderate correlation between the measured and simulated concentrations (r = 0.62 for (222)Rn, r = 0.55 for CO(2)) was found. The results of the simulation indicated the following optimal DVRs: (i) 36.6 m(3) h(−1) (0.5 air changes per hour, ACH) to ensure a CO(2) concentration below 1000 ppm and a (222)Rn concentration below 100 Bq m(−3); and (ii) 46.9 m(3) h(−1) (0.7 ACH) to ensure a CO(2) concentration below 800 ppm. These levels are the most compatible with the 5C_Cat I (category I of indoor environmental quality, defined by EN 16798-1:2019) scenario, which resulted in concentrations of 656 ± 121 ppm for CO(2) and 57 ± 13 Bq m(−3) for (222)Rn. The approach presented is applicable to various types of residential buildings with high overcrowding rates, where a sufficient amount of air volume to achieve category I indoor environmental quality has to be provided. Lower CO(2) and (222)Rn concentrations indoors minimise health risk, which is especially important for protecting sensitive and fragile occupants.
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spelling pubmed-88715732022-02-25 Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling Dovjak, Mateja Vene, Ožbej Vaupotič, Janja Int J Environ Res Public Health Article The impact of ventilation efficiency on radon ((222)Rn) and carbon dioxide (CO(2)) concentrations in the indoor air of a residential building was studied by applying transient data analysis within the CONTAM 3.4 program. Continuous measurements of (222)Rn and CO(2) concentrations, together with basic meteorological parameters, were carried out in an apartment (floor area about 27 m(2)) located in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Throughout the experiment (October 3–15), frequent ventilation (several times per day), poor ventilation (once to twice per day) and no ventilation scenarios were applied, and the exact ventilation and occupancy schedule were recorded. Based on the measurements, a transient simulation of (222)Rn and CO(2) concentrations was performed for six sets of scenarios, where the design ventilation rate (DVR) varied based on the ventilation requirements and recommendations. On the days of frequent ventilation, a moderate correlation between the measured and simulated concentrations (r = 0.62 for (222)Rn, r = 0.55 for CO(2)) was found. The results of the simulation indicated the following optimal DVRs: (i) 36.6 m(3) h(−1) (0.5 air changes per hour, ACH) to ensure a CO(2) concentration below 1000 ppm and a (222)Rn concentration below 100 Bq m(−3); and (ii) 46.9 m(3) h(−1) (0.7 ACH) to ensure a CO(2) concentration below 800 ppm. These levels are the most compatible with the 5C_Cat I (category I of indoor environmental quality, defined by EN 16798-1:2019) scenario, which resulted in concentrations of 656 ± 121 ppm for CO(2) and 57 ± 13 Bq m(−3) for (222)Rn. The approach presented is applicable to various types of residential buildings with high overcrowding rates, where a sufficient amount of air volume to achieve category I indoor environmental quality has to be provided. Lower CO(2) and (222)Rn concentrations indoors minimise health risk, which is especially important for protecting sensitive and fragile occupants. MDPI 2022-02-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8871573/ /pubmed/35206313 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042125 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dovjak, Mateja
Vene, Ožbej
Vaupotič, Janja
Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title_full Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title_fullStr Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title_short Analysis of Ventilation Efficiency as Simultaneous Control of Radon and Carbon Dioxide Levels in Indoor Air Applying Transient Modelling
title_sort analysis of ventilation efficiency as simultaneous control of radon and carbon dioxide levels in indoor air applying transient modelling
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8871573/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35206313
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042125
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