Designed for small- to medium-sized businesses, the device allows companies to use the monitor while avoiding additional intrusions into their own networks.
It is designed with equipment compliance and safety in mind and can be used in identifying dangerous leaks and fugitive emissions for new building inspections.
The AQ VOC provides IAQ testing professionals the latest technology and the flexibility of testing a wide range of different volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in one handheld, portable unit.
This instrument provides complete capability for incubator air quality monitoring and real-time data logging. The CO2 measurement ranges include 0-5 percent; 0-10 percent; and 0-20 percent.
Lux Products Corp. is a manufacturer that designs with the end user in mind. This is made evident when you talk with Robert Munin, CEO and president, or even when you visit the company’s “about us” section on its website.
This air quality monitor combines laser technology, airflow control, and a crafted calibration algorithm to achieve accurate data. The monitor’s large 5-inch LCD color screen simultaneously displays real-time indoor and local outdoor air quality.
The AQ Pro-F includes a dynamic formaldehyde sensor (0-10 ppm), and the standard model includes temperature, RH percentage, barometric air pressure, and differential pressure.
AirSense is an intelligent, residential IAQ monitoring and analytics system
November 30, 2016
A team of engineers at Michigan State University is working to perfect a new technology that not only warns of a problem with indoor air, but also identifies the source of the IAQ problem and offers suggestions on how to remedy the situation.
This smart IAQ monitor is applicable anywhere with Wi-Fi. It constantly measures and logs volatile organic compounds (VOCs), CO, temperature, and humidity in five-minute intervals.
Sensor data will enable people to improve the indoor air they breathe
March 30, 2016
Carnegie Mellon University researchers believe that learning about the quality of the air you breathe should be as easy and inexpensive as borrowing a book from a library, and that’s why they plan to provide free Speck air quality monitors to 100 public libraries nationwide.