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Indoor Air Quality of Non-Residential Urban Buildings in Delhi, India

Arindam Datta, R. Suresh,Akansha Gupta,Damini Singh, Priyanka Kulshrestha

International journal of sustainable built environment(2017)

Cited 36|Views10
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Abstract
Nearly 30% of total population and over 2million students of Delhi spent above 1/3rd of their daily time in different office buildings and educational institutions of Delhi, of which the ambient air quality is reportedly worst in the globe. However, studies on indoor air quality of non-residential buildings are scarce in India. Present study was conducted in two office buildings and one educational building in Delhi during pre-monsoon. CO2, PM2.5 and VOCs were measured inside each building at every 5min interval between 9:30AM and 5:30PM for 5days every week. The average CO2 concentration in both office buildings (1513ppm and 1338ppm) was recorded much higher than the ASHRAE standard. Ductless air-conditioning system couple with poor air-circulation and active air-filtration could be attributed to significantly higher concentration of PM2.5 in one of the office buildings (43.8μgm−3). However, there was significant variation in the concentration of different pollutants at different locations in a building. Among different non-residential buildings, significantly lower concentration of all pollutants was recorded in the educational building (CO2: 672ppm; PM2.5: 22.8μgm−3 and VOC: 0.08ppm). Total hazard ratio analysis ranks one of the office buildings as most hazardous to workers health compared to others.
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Key words
Indoor air quality,Non-residential building,PM2.5,Carbon dioxide,Total VOCs,Delhi
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