Soiling of Building Materials

Abstract
Six building materials were exposed at five sites in Birmingham, Alabama, to determine the rates of soiling by different levels of suspended particulate. The exposed materials were (1) painted cedar siding, (2) concrete block, (3) brick, (4) limestone, (5) asphalt shingles, and (6) window glass. Suspended particulate levels ranged from an annual geometric mean of 60 μg/m3 at the clean site to 250 μg/m3 at the most polluted site. Degrees of soiling were determined by measuring reflectance from the opaque surfaces and haze through the glass. Excellent dose-response relationships were obtained for the white surfaces— painted cedar siding and asphalt shingles. The degree of soiling of the paints was directly proportional to the square root of the suspended particulate dose. The shingle soiling was directly proportional to the dose. These regression equations can account for from 74 to 92% of the variability in reflectance measurements. Similar regressions for brick can account for from 34 to 50 % of the variability. Poor correlations were obtained for concrete, limestone, and window glass.

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