Abstract
This study proposes an approach of evaluating the haze stress index (HSI) and quantifying people’s feelings for haze stress. The three special municipalities in Taiwan were selected as representative cities of slightly, moderately, and heavily contaminated with fine particulate matter (PM2.5) to evaluate the adaptability of the proposed approach. Equations with weightings of parameters to evaluate four temporal HSIs—hourly, daily, monthly, and yearly HSIs—were established. The parameters were measured PM2.5, relative humidity, and secondary organic aerosol (represented by the sum of measured O3 and NO2). The results of evaluating the HSIs in the three cities demonstrated that the inverse-variance weighting method is the best because the haze stress sensitivities in the four temporal periods were higher than those obtained using the unit and variance weighting methods to respond to the real situation of air quality. Variation in the four temporal HSIs for the three cities demonstrates that the variation increases with an increasing level of air pollution. When comparing between 2015 and 2018, the fractional reductions in HSIs in the slightly, moderately, and heavily contaminated cities were ≤18.4%, ≤10.8%, and ≤11.3%, respectively. It is recommended that the HSIs are categorized into five haze stress groups based on the haze stress level. The people’s feelings in the three cities on the haze stresses were represented using the established quantifying descriptors in detail. The results show that the proposed approach can provide quantification indices of haze stress and people’s feelings in a regional haze, thereby firmly establishing the governmental improvement policy.
Highlights
A number of environmental indices are used to state regional air quality
The results show that the means and standard deviation of hourly, daily, and monthly haze stress index (HSI) in the three cities have been decreasing year by year, which is due to the effort of each city’s environmental protection bureau to improve air quality in recent years
This study proposed an approach for evaluating the HSI to quantify the effect of haze and the feelings of people in a region
Summary
A number of environmental indices are used to state regional air quality. The air quality index (AQI)was developed by government agencies to communicate the degree to which air pollutants affect human health at a given time. A number of environmental indices are used to state regional air quality. Was developed by government agencies to communicate the degree to which air pollutants affect human health at a given time. The AQI is based on the maximum values of the subindices of pollutants—fine particulate matter (PM2.5 ), sulfur dioxide (SO2 ), nitrogen dioxide (NO2 ), carbon monoxide (CO), and ozone (O3 ). Plaia et al [3] proposed a multipollutant–multisite air quality index approach for considering the combined effect of various pollutants in the environmental quality over time. Thach et al [4] aggregated the subindices of PM10 , SO2 , NO2 , and O3 by using the root-mean-power function to construct an overall AQI on health. Gorai et al [5] proposed the fuzzy air quality health
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