Residential Air Exchange Rates in the United States: Empirical and Estimated Parametric Distributions by Season and Climatic Region. Murray, D. M. & Burmaster, D. E. Risk Analysis, 15(4):459–465, August, 1995. Paper doi abstract bibtex The purpose of this paper is to undertake a statistical analysis to specify empirical distributions and to estimate univariate parametric probability distributions for air exchange rates for residential structures in the United States. To achieve this goal, we used data compiled by the Brookhaven National Laboratory using a method known as the perfluorocarbon tracer (PFT) technique. While these data are not fully representative of all areas of the country or all housing types, they are judged to be by far the best available. The analysis is characterized by four key points: the use of data for 2,844 households; a four-region breakdown based on heating degree days, a best available measure of climatic factors affecting air exchange rates; estimation of lognormal distributions as well as provision of empirical (frequency) distributions; and provision of these distributions for all of the data, for the data segmented by the four regions, for the data segmented by the four seasons, and for the data segmented by a 16 region by season breakdown. Except in a few cases, primarily for small sample sizes, air exchange rates were found to be well fit by lognormal distributions (adjusted R2 0.95). The empirical or lognormal distributions may be used in indoor air models or as input variables for probabilistic human health risk assessments.
@article{murray_residential_1995,
title = {Residential {Air} {Exchange} {Rates} in the {United} {States}: {Empirical} and {Estimated} {Parametric} {Distributions} by {Season} and {Climatic} {Region}},
volume = {15},
issn = {1539-6924},
shorttitle = {Residential {Air} {Exchange} {Rates} in the {United} {States}},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1539-6924.1995.tb00338.x/abstract},
doi = {10.1111/j.1539-6924.1995.tb00338.x},
abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to undertake a statistical analysis to specify empirical distributions and to estimate univariate parametric probability distributions for air exchange rates for residential structures in the United States. To achieve this goal, we used data compiled by the Brookhaven National Laboratory using a method known as the perfluorocarbon tracer (PFT) technique. While these data are not fully representative of all areas of the country or all housing types, they are judged to be by far the best available. The analysis is characterized by four key points: the use of data for 2,844 households; a four-region breakdown based on heating degree days, a best available measure of climatic factors affecting air exchange rates; estimation of lognormal distributions as well as provision of empirical (frequency) distributions; and provision of these distributions for all of the data, for the data segmented by the four regions, for the data segmented by the four seasons, and for the data segmented by a 16 region by season breakdown. Except in a few cases, primarily for small sample sizes, air exchange rates were found to be well fit by lognormal distributions (adjusted R2 0.95). The empirical or lognormal distributions may be used in indoor air models or as input variables for probabilistic human health risk assessments.},
language = {en},
number = {4},
journal = {Risk Analysis},
author = {Murray, Donald M. and Burmaster, David E.},
month = aug,
year = {1995},
keywords = {Air exchange rates, Monte Carlo, air changes per hour, distributions, exposure, indoor air},
pages = {459--465},
}
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