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When the Air Turns Unsafe? A Simple Look at AQI

Air pollution is something that most of us encounter and experience every day. Smog in the sky. Dust on machines. A burning smell near roads or factories. Over time, this polluted air affects our health, our work, and the places we live.

The Air Quality Index, or AQI, helps us understand how clean or dirty the air really is. It turns complex pollution data into simple numbers that anyone can follow.

As cities grow and industries expand, keeping track of air quality has become more important than ever.

What Is AQI?

AQI is a number used to show how safe or unsafe the air is to breathe. A low AQI means the air is clean, A high AQI means the air is polluted and can cause health problems.

Governments and health agencies use AQI to warn people when air quality gets bad. Industries can also use it to check how their operations affect the air inside and outside their plants.

Pollutants That Affect AQI

AQI is based on six main pollutants. Many of them come directly from industrial activity.

  1. Particulate Matter (PM10 and PM2.5)

Particulate matter is made of tiny solid or liquid particles floating in the air.

PM10 includes dust from construction, mining, and material handling.
PM2.5 is much finer. It comes from burning fuel in boilers, furnaces, engines, and power plants.

PM2.5 is the most harmful. These particles are so small that they can reach deep into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream.

Common sources include Cement plants and steel plants, grinding, crushing, and conveying systems, Vehicle exhaust, Construction and crop burning.

    2. Ground-Level Ozone (O3)

Ground-level ozone forms when sunlight reacts with gases like nitrogen oxides and VOCs.This kind of ozone is not helpful. It irritates the lungs and makes breathing harder. Common Sources are Vehicle emissions, Power plants, and industrial boilers

     3. Carbon Monoxide (CO)

Carbon monoxide is a gas you cannot see or smell. It comes from the incomplete burning of fuel. At high levels, it reduces oxygen in the blood and can be life-threatening. Common sources include industrial combustion systems, Diesel generators, Vehicles, and biomass burning.

       4 . Sulfur Dioxide (SO2)

Sulfur dioxide is released when coal or oil is burned.It causes breathing problems and also leads to acid rain. The most common sources are Coal-fired power plants,
Refineries and metal processing units

       5. Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)

Nitrogen dioxide forms during high-temperature combustion.It helps create smog and fine dust in the air. Common sources are Industrial boilers, Power generation, and vehicles.

          6. Lead (Pb)

Lead pollution has reduced over the years, but has not disappeared. Common Sources are Metal processing industries, Battery manufacturing industries and Waste burning.
Lead is especially dangerous for children and can at brain development.

AQI Levels and What They Mean

AQI Range

Air Quality

What It Means

0–50

Good

Air is clean

51–100

Moderate

Mostly safe

101–150

Unhealthy for sensitive people

Breathing discomfort

151–200

Unhealthy

Health problems possible

201–300

Very unhealthy

Serious health risk

301+

Hazardous

Emergency conditions

 

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