What is the meaning of the word (frequently, "PM2.5") under the AQI?

Ever wondered why the AirVisual App displays the word "PM2.5" or "PM10" or another pollutant under the main AQI number?

Let us explain!

The Air Quality Index (AQI) is calculated by weighting 6 key pollutants in a formula. These pollutants are: PM2.5, PM10, Ozone, NO2, CO and SO2. The formula is intended to translate sometimes confusing concentration measurements of pollutants in the air, into one easy-to-understand scale, which shows a comparable level of health risk across pollutants (which are clearly colour-coded). Whichever pollutant is at the most 'risky' concentration (highest AQI number), will dictate overall AQI.

On the app we display the main pollutant in text below the AQI number.

main pullutant displayed below AQI



The main pollutant is often PM2.5. Sometimes in hot summer months, Ozone will be the main pollutant, meanwhile - in particularly sandy or dusty places, PM10 will often be the main pollutant. The main pollutant meaning that that pollutant will dictate the AQI curve.

Return to AirVisual Knowledge Base

The number one air cleaning solution for your home.

Lorem ipsum Donec ipsum consectetur metus a conubia velit lacinia viverra consectetur vehicula Donec tincidunt lorem.

TALK TO AN EXPERT
Article Resources

Article Resources

Search

search-normal