Rapidly locating and characterizing pollutant releases in buildings: An application of Bayesian data analysis

Publication Type

Journal Article

Authors

DOI

Abstract

Releases of airborne contaminants in or near a building can lead to significant human exposures unless prompt response measures are taken. However, possible responses can include conflicting strategies, such as shutting the ventilation system off versus running it in a purge mode, or having occupants evacuate versus sheltering in place. The proper choice depends in part on knowing the source locations, the amounts released, and the likely future dispersion routes of the pollutants. We present an approach that estimates this information in real time. It applies Bayesian statistics to interpret measurements of airborne pollutant concentrations from multiple sensors placed in the building and computes best estimates and uncertainties of the release conditions. The algorithm is fast, capable of continuously updating the estimates as measurements stream in from sensors. We demonstrate the approach using a hypothetical pollutant release in a five-room building. Unknowns to the interpretation algorithm include location, duration, and strength of the source, and some building and weather conditions. We examine two sensor sampling plans and three levels of data quality. Data interpretation in all examples is rapid; however, locating and characterizing the source with high probability depends on the amount and quality of data, and the sampling plan.

Journal

Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association

Volume

52

Year of Publication

2002

Issue

12

ISSN

1047-3289

Organization

Research Areas