A project to assess air pollution at the National Archeological Museum in Naples was carried out. The main goal of the project was to develop and test a reliable yet simple monitoring system to be adopted at the same time in several exposition rooms. Nitrogen dioxide, hydrogen chloride, nitrous acid, and sulphur dioxide were the chemical species addressed by the technique. Monitoring was simultaneously performed in five rooms, and pollutant concentrations were determined using two passive samplers. The sampling time was approximately one month per period. In addition to passive samplers, environmental data loggers were used to obtain temperature and relative humidity data. Results show high concentrations of nitrogen dioxide inside rooms, which were consistent with those found in outdoor environments and are close to the values calculated considering the air exchange rates, estimated through time gradients of ambient temperature. The minimum values were recorded in a basement room that had a low ventilation rate. The conversion of nitrogen dioxide to real surfaces produces nitric acid and nitrous acid. Large amounts of nitrous acid, up to 15 µg/m3, were found in exposition rooms, with maximum values in the basement room, where the air exchange rate is limited, and the surface-to-volume ratio is the highest among the monitored rooms. Data analysis demonstrated that the system could discriminate between nitrous acid and nitrogen dioxide. The results show that, for the first time, passive samplers can overcome the problem of mutual interference between nitrogen-containing species. Nitrates and nitrites found in the alkaline passive sampler were generally found not to be interfered by nitrogen dioxide. Nitric acid was also found in the gas phase, likely generated by dissociation of ammonium nitrate in particulate matter. Hydrogen chloride and sulphur dioxide were present at few µg/m3. Nitrous acid is the most relevant acidic species found indoors. The presence of pollutants was discussed in terms of the reliability of the analytical procedure and its significance for indoor air pollution.

Valentini, F., Allegrini, I., Colasanti, I.a., Zaratti, C., Macchia, A., Barandoni, C., et al. (2025). Preliminary Assessment of Air Pollution in the Archaeological Museum of Naples (Italy): Long Term Monitoring of Nitrogen Dioxide and Nitrous Acid. AIR, 3(2), 12 [10.3390/air3020012].

Preliminary Assessment of Air Pollution in the Archaeological Museum of Naples (Italy): Long Term Monitoring of Nitrogen Dioxide and Nitrous Acid

FEDERICA VALENTINI
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
Irene Angela Colasanti
Formal Analysis
;
Camilla Zaratti
Software
;
Cristiana Barandoni
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Anna Neri
Membro del Collaboration Group
2025-05-01

Abstract

A project to assess air pollution at the National Archeological Museum in Naples was carried out. The main goal of the project was to develop and test a reliable yet simple monitoring system to be adopted at the same time in several exposition rooms. Nitrogen dioxide, hydrogen chloride, nitrous acid, and sulphur dioxide were the chemical species addressed by the technique. Monitoring was simultaneously performed in five rooms, and pollutant concentrations were determined using two passive samplers. The sampling time was approximately one month per period. In addition to passive samplers, environmental data loggers were used to obtain temperature and relative humidity data. Results show high concentrations of nitrogen dioxide inside rooms, which were consistent with those found in outdoor environments and are close to the values calculated considering the air exchange rates, estimated through time gradients of ambient temperature. The minimum values were recorded in a basement room that had a low ventilation rate. The conversion of nitrogen dioxide to real surfaces produces nitric acid and nitrous acid. Large amounts of nitrous acid, up to 15 µg/m3, were found in exposition rooms, with maximum values in the basement room, where the air exchange rate is limited, and the surface-to-volume ratio is the highest among the monitored rooms. Data analysis demonstrated that the system could discriminate between nitrous acid and nitrogen dioxide. The results show that, for the first time, passive samplers can overcome the problem of mutual interference between nitrogen-containing species. Nitrates and nitrites found in the alkaline passive sampler were generally found not to be interfered by nitrogen dioxide. Nitric acid was also found in the gas phase, likely generated by dissociation of ammonium nitrate in particulate matter. Hydrogen chloride and sulphur dioxide were present at few µg/m3. Nitrous acid is the most relevant acidic species found indoors. The presence of pollutants was discussed in terms of the reliability of the analytical procedure and its significance for indoor air pollution.
mag-2025
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore CHIM/12 - Chimica dell'Ambiente e dei Beni Culturali
Settore CHEM-01/B - Chimica dell'ambiente e dei beni culturali
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
indoor pollution; MANN museum environment; nitrogen containing pollutants; passive samplers; Ion Chromatography (IC)
“Brevetti +” CUP: C85F20000440008), co-financed by the Ministry of Economic Development.
https://www.mdpi.com/2813-4168/3/2/12
Valentini, F., Allegrini, I., Colasanti, I.a., Zaratti, C., Macchia, A., Barandoni, C., et al. (2025). Preliminary Assessment of Air Pollution in the Archaeological Museum of Naples (Italy): Long Term Monitoring of Nitrogen Dioxide and Nitrous Acid. AIR, 3(2), 12 [10.3390/air3020012].
Valentini, F; Allegrini, I; Colasanti, Ia; Zaratti, C; Macchia, A; Barandoni, C; Neri, A
Articolo su rivista
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
air-03-00012.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Articolo
Tipologia: Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 4.38 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
4.38 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/421743
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact