Note from the Web Editor: The following page is not maintained. The information is included for historical interest only, and should not be relied upon for accuracy for current air quality control procedures or standards.
May 1997
Thirty years ago, measuring smog levels could be a real headache.
Ozone measuring instruments demanded constant baby-sitting and frequently leaked chemicals so caustic that they etched the concrete floors and dissolved the plaster walls of monitoring stations. Vacuum pumps clattered constantly.
"It was like working in a factory. Those pumps were really noisy," said William Bope, AQMD's air quality monitoring manager.
Technicians had to fill the refrigerator-sized machines with wet chemical solutions that reacted with ozone and turned colors, providing a means for gauging the pollutant's levels. When a machine's plumbing backed up during a weekend, workers would arrive on Monday morning to a floor flooded with acid solutions. The finicky devices also needed constant adjustment.
"You'd sneeze and the darn thing would be out of calibration," Bope said.
Today, an ozone monitor can fit into a large briefcase. Using only ultraviolet light and solid-state electronics, the silent devices can measure smog levels continuously, with little maintenance.
Scientists started developing air pollution monitoring devices in the late 1940s. Since little was known about the chemical nature of smog, and it had never before been measured, they had to start from scratch.
The first reliable field monitoring technique measured ozone levels based on the amount of time it took for the pollutant to crack a thin strip of rubber. As a vacuum pump drew a measured amount of outdoor air across a folded strip of rubber, a technician with a stopwatch and a magnifying eyepiece timed how long it took for the rubber to crack.
In 1955, the Los Angeles APCD established an alert system to warn the public and curtail or shut down industrial activity in the event of an impending air pollution emergency. The following year, APCD officials finished installing a 15-station monitoring network, the first in the nation to provide continuous air quality data for measuring and forecasting smog levels.
That system grew into today's network of more than 30 stations, which is the backbone for making daily forecasts, issuing health advisories, gauging long-term progress in reducing smog levels and developing air quality models to predict future attainment of clean air standards.
Today, ozone levels are measured by shining ultraviolet light through a tube filled with outdoor air. Since ozone absorbs ultraviolet light, the amount that passes through the tube is measured to reveal the pollutant's concentration.
Air quality data is recorded on computers and automatically sent by telephone to AQMD headquarters. Each instrument technician, who used to handle only one station, now maintains three or four.
Computers at AQMD headquarters consolidate this information into summaries used to advise schools, residents and the media. Anyone can check current smog levels by viewing current hourly readings.
In the future, air quality monitoring equipment is expected to become even smaller and require less maintenance. Instead of occupying a small building, monitoring equipment may be contained in a lunch pail-sized box mounted on a telephone pole.
As smog levels are reduced and some areas actually achieve health standards, fewer stations will be needed. But some will always stand watch to ensure that air pollution levels continue to decline, and that once clean air is achieved, unhealthful smog never returns.