Hindustan Times (Delhi)

When air purifying units became waste bins

- Joydeep Thakur joydeep.thakur@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: Cigarette butts, bidi packets, chewing gums and wires — these are some of things that you would normally expect to find in a garbage bin but certainly not air purifying units installed on Delhi roads. But that is exactly what officials found while inspecting WAYUS (Wind Augmentati­on Purifying Units) at different places in the city.

Now, scientists have begun replacing many of these pilot project units with ones, which, apart from promising almost double the efficiency in cleaning air, will also be tamper proof.

“The older version had more openings through which people sometimes used to insert cigarette and bidi ends and other garbage,” said Rakesh Kumar, director of National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute (NEERI), a research institute under the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). “This would damage the filter systems and we had to frequently change them. The new machines are covered to prevent people from putting in such garbage.”

Hindustan Times found a chewing gum stuck in one of the machines installed at ITO intersecti­on. Cigarette and bidi ends and gutka packets were scattered near the machines.

More than 70 such WAYU machines were installed last year at some of the most polluted road intersecti­ons such as ITO, Anand Vihar, Wazirpur Chowk, Shadipur and Bhikaji Cama. At least 19 old machines have already been replaced by the new version.

BETTER EFFICIENCY

While the old devices could clean 1,250m3 air per hour, the new version can clean 2,500m3 air per hour.

The new version is also sleek and will occupy less space.

“Preliminar­y results showed that the older version could bring down up to 60% of PM10 and 40% of PM2.5. The new versions are being installed and it would take at least two months to check their performanc­e,” said S Gulia, scientist from NEERI’S Delhi zonal centre who monitors the devices in the national capital.

National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute will also analyse the dust trapped in the old device’s filters to deter- mine their source.

Scientists said that different versions of WAYU — one that can clean up to 10,000 sqm of air and a shorter version intended to be used in parking lots and basements — are being developed.

On certain winter days, when the air quality breaches the ‘severe’ mark, concentrat­ion of PM10 and PM2.5 in the air shoots up to more than five times the safe standard.

The pilot project is being funded by the central government.

A similar pilot project in which air filter units called ‘Pariyayant­ra’ have been mounted on the roof of buses is being carried out by Faridabad-based research organisati­on Manav Rachna Internatio­nal Institute of Research and Studies. “Each machine is trapping more than 50 grams of dust in 10 hours,” said Amit Kumar Singh, a research associate of the institute.

 ?? AMAL KS/HT PHOTO ?? The new system (foreground) is more efficient than the previous one (green) and tamper-proof.
AMAL KS/HT PHOTO The new system (foreground) is more efficient than the previous one (green) and tamper-proof.

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