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Chart air quality data

    Air quality data is available from 1 January 2016. Individual stations have been monitoring for different time periods so data may not be available for all possible times.
    Deagon station began monitoring air quality on 13 July 2021.

Ozone at Deagon, Friday 30 September 2022 about Ozone

Deagon station overview

The guideline for Ozone is 0.1ppm (1hr avg) and 0.065ppm (8hr avg).

None of the data is validated (0% validated, 0/24 records)

Legend to air quality category colours about category values

  • Good
  • Fair
  • Poor
  • Very poor
  • Extremely poor

Chart data

Datetime Hourly measurement
2022-09-30 23:00:00 0.018
2022-09-30 22:00:00 0.013
2022-09-30 21:00:00 0.012
2022-09-30 20:00:00 0.012
2022-09-30 19:00:00 0.018
2022-09-30 18:00:00 0.027
2022-09-30 17:00:00 0.036
2022-09-30 16:00:00 0.045
2022-09-30 15:00:00 0.049
2022-09-30 14:00:00 0.046
2022-09-30 13:00:00 0.04
2022-09-30 12:00:00 0.036
2022-09-30 11:00:00 0.033
2022-09-30 10:00:00 0.031
2022-09-30 09:00:00 0.031
2022-09-30 08:00:00 0.012
2022-09-30 07:00:00 0.004
2022-09-30 06:00:00 0.001
2022-09-30 05:00:00 0.001
2022-09-30 04:00:00 0.003
2022-09-30 03:00:00 0.007
2022-09-30 02:00:00 0.007
2022-09-30 01:00:00 0.007
2022-09-30 00:00:00 0.007

None of the data is validated (0% validated, 0/48 records)

About air quality categories

Air quality categories are used to make it easier to interpret air quality data by reducing the complexity associated with different pollutant concentration units and air quality guideline values.

Each air quality measurement from a monitoring station is assigned an air quality category rating based on comparison of the measurement value against the relevant air quality guideline. Five colour-coded air quality categories are used, being ‘Good’ (green), ‘Fair’ (yellow), ‘Poor’ (orange), ‘Very poor’ (red) or ‘Extremely poor’ (dark red). Values greater than the air quality guideline will be appear as ‘Poor’, ‘Very poor’ or ‘Extremely poor’.

More information about air quality categories.

About Hydrogen sulfide (30min)

Hydrogen sulfide is a flammable, colorless gas that smells like rotten eggs. People usually can smell hydrogen sulfide at low concentrations in air ranging from 0.5 to 300 parts per billion (ppb). Hydrogen sulfide occurs naturally in crude petroleum, natural gas, volcanic gases, and hot springs. It can also result from bacterial breakdown of organic matter. Industrial sources of hydrogen sulfide include petroleum refineries, natural gas plants, petrochemical plants, coke oven plants, food processing plants, and tanneries.

The guideline for Hydrogen sulfide is 5ppb (30 min avg) for odour nuisance and 108ppb (24hr avg) for health and wellbeing.

Hydrogen sulfide (30min) is measured in parts per billion.

Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Last updated
8 July 2024