Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4471272 Waste Management 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•First real-time study to monitor bioaerosols released from a composting/green waste site.•“Bioaerosol site profiles” constructed.•Release profiles different weekdays to weekends.

This study is the first to employ the on-line WIBS-4 (Wideband Integrated Bioaerosol Sensor) technique for the monitoring of bioaerosol emissions and non-fluorescing “dust” released from a composting/green waste site. The purpose of the research was to provide a “proof of principle” for using WIBS to monitor such a location continually over days and nights in order to construct comparative “bioaerosol site profiles”. The real-time data obtained was then used to assess variations of the bioaerosol counts as a function of size, “shape”, site location, working activity levels, time of day, relative humidity, wind speeds and wind directions.Three short campaigns were undertaken, one classified as a “light” workload period, another as a “heavy” workload period and finally a weekend when the site was closed. One main bioaerosol size regime was found to predominate: 0.5–3 μm with morphologies ranging from elongated to ellipsoidal/spherical. The real-time number-concentration data provides a long-term “video” record of the site and were consistent with the Andersen sampling protocol performed that provides only a single “snapshot” for bioaerosol release. The number-concentration of fluorescent particles as a proportion of total particle counts amounted, on average, to ∼1% for the “light” workday period, ∼7% for the “heavy” workday period and ∼18% for the weekend. The bioaerosol release profiles at the weekend were considerably different from those monitored during the working weekdays.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
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