Matching Items (1,602)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

127598-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsFraser, Andrew (Author) / Linke, Marcus (Author) / Reilly, Russ (Author) / Rosales, Justin (Author) / Rossman, Daniel (Author) / Staffnik, Abbey (Author) / Tarin, Mohammed (Author) / Seager, Thomas (Author)
Created2012-08-14
127599-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsFraser, Andrew (Author) / Linke, Marcus (Author) / Reilly, Russ (Author) / Rosales, Justin (Author) / Staffnik, Abbey (Author) / Tarin, Mohammed (Author) / Tijerino, Berman (Author) / Wellman, Robert (Author) / Seager, Thomas (Teacher)
Created2012-08-10
Description

This paper’s intent is to explore the environmental gap analysis tool, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), as it pertains to the decision-making process.

As LCA is more frequently utilized as a measurement of environmental impact, it is prudent
to understand the historical and potential impact that LCA has had or can have on

This paper’s intent is to explore the environmental gap analysis tool, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), as it pertains to the decision-making process.

As LCA is more frequently utilized as a measurement of environmental impact, it is prudent
to understand the historical and potential impact that LCA has had or can have on its inclusion in public policy domain - specifically as it intersects the anticipatory governance framework and the supporting decision-making precautionary principle framework. For that purpose, LCA will be examined in partnership with the Precautionary Principle in order to establish practical
application.

LCA and Precautionary Principle have been used together in multiple functions. In two
case studies, the California Green Chemistry Initiative and in Nanotechnology uncertainty, there is a notion that these practices can create value for one another when addressing complex issues.

The recommendations presented in this paper are ones that recognize the current
dynamics of the LCA field along with the different sectors of decision makers. For effective
catalytic initiatives, adoptions of these recommendations are best initially leveraged by
government entities to lead by example. The proposed recommendations are summarized into
the following categories and explored in further detail later in the paper:
       1. Improvement in data sharing capabilities for LCA purposes.
       2. Common consensus on standards and technical aspects of LCA structure.
       3. Increased investment of resource allocation for LCA use and development.

Created2013-05
200978-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

The Salt River in Arizona has been dammed and rerouted away from its natural channel for human use since the late 1930s. Once a thriving hydrological ecosystem and riparian zone, the scar of a dry riverbed snakes through Phoenix, Arizona. The exception to this dry riverbed is a 10-kilometer, lush,

The Salt River in Arizona has been dammed and rerouted away from its natural channel for human use since the late 1930s. Once a thriving hydrological ecosystem and riparian zone, the scar of a dry riverbed snakes through Phoenix, Arizona. The exception to this dry riverbed is a 10-kilometer, lush, riparian corridor to the west of Phoenix where ecosystem rehabilitation has been enabled by the effluent of the Tres Rios Constructed Treatment Wetlands (CTW). This study investigated the ecosystem health of this stretch of river, referred to here as Rio Verdadero, by identifying how water quality is impacted as it flows from east to west. To quantify key water quality indicators, water samples were collected every two months during 2024 at three locations along the river: The Tres Rios CTW outflow, The Base & Meridian Wildlife Area, and the Lower Buckeye Diversion Dam. Additionally, CTW outflow data were used to estimate rates of nutrient sequestration by the riparian ecosystem. Results showed a decline in nutrients and improvement of water quality downstream of the Tres Rios Wetlands, indicating a healthy, functioning riparian ecosystem as a result of natural rehabilitation and intentional restoration that has taken place in the last 15 years.

ContributorsCrockford, Ethan (Author) / Childers, Daniel L. (Committee member) / Hartnett, Hilairy (Committee member) / Pataki, Diane E. (Committee member) / Central Arizona-Phoenix Long Term Ecological Research (Contributor)
Created2024 (year uncertain)
Description
This study piloted two text message-based interventions to improve WIC appointment attendance and food benefit redemption among Inter Tribal Council of Arizona (ITCA) WIC participants. Over five months, participants received enhanced text reminders—two instead of one for appointments and targeted reminders for benefit redemption. Partial redeemers received a single reminder

This study piloted two text message-based interventions to improve WIC appointment attendance and food benefit redemption among Inter Tribal Council of Arizona (ITCA) WIC participants. Over five months, participants received enhanced text reminders—two instead of one for appointments and targeted reminders for benefit redemption. Partial redeemers received a single reminder one week before benefits expired, while non-redeemers received two reminders, one a week before expiration and another two days before if benefits were still unredeemed.
Created2025-01
201714-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Heat exposure for urban populations has become more prevalent as the temperature and duration of heat waves in cities increase. Occupational exposure to heat is a major concern for personal health, and excessive heat exposure can cause devastating outcomes. While occupational heat exposure studies have traditionally focused on environmental temperature,

Heat exposure for urban populations has become more prevalent as the temperature and duration of heat waves in cities increase. Occupational exposure to heat is a major concern for personal health, and excessive heat exposure can cause devastating outcomes. While occupational heat exposure studies have traditionally focused on environmental temperature, work intensity, and clothing, little is known about the daily exposure profile of workers, including their daily travel and working patterns. This study developed a novel measure of exposure and reprieve dynamics, the moving average hourly exposure (MAHE) to balance short-duration but high-exposure events and capture the inability to reprieve from exposure events. MAHE was assessed by combining an activity-based travel model (ABM) and the Occupational Requirement Survey to simulate urban workers' total daily heat exposure. The simulation considers daily travel, work schedules, and outdoor working frequency. The simulation was conducted for 1 million workers in Phoenix, Arizona, using Mean Radiant Temperature (MRT). The results show that 53% to 89% of workers in Phoenix's construction, agriculture, transportation, raw material extraction, and entertainment industries will likely experience MAHE over 38°C for at least an hour. These industries also have up to 34% of the laborers exposed to over 7 hours of continuous 38°C and above MAHE exposure. The location of the most intense heat exposure was identified near the downtown and central business districts, significantly different from the home locations of the workers in suburban and rural areas. Formulating the MAHE balances heat risk events with cooling benefits and aids in identifying individuals with prolonged high heat exposure.

ContributorsLi, Rui (Author) / Vanos, Jennifer K. (Author) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author) / Middel, Ariane (Author) / Hernández-Cortés, Danae (Author) / Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering (Issuing body) / Arizona State University (Contributor)
Created2025-05
160731-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

The City of Phoenix Street Transportation Department partnered with the Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service at Arizona State University (ASU) and researchers from various ASU schools to evaluate the effectiveness, performance, and community perception of the new pavement coating. The data collection and analysis occurred across multiple neighborhoods

The City of Phoenix Street Transportation Department partnered with the Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service at Arizona State University (ASU) and researchers from various ASU schools to evaluate the effectiveness, performance, and community perception of the new pavement coating. The data collection and analysis occurred across multiple neighborhoods and at varying times across days and/or months over the course of one year (July 15, 2020–July 14, 2021), allowing the team to study the impacts of the surface treatment under various weather conditions.

Created2021-09
141423-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Background:
Environmental heat exposure is a public health concern. The impacts of environmental heat on mortality and morbidity at the population scale are well documented, but little is known about specific exposures that individuals experience.

Objectives:
The first objective of this work was to catalyze discussion of the role of personal heat exposure

Background:
Environmental heat exposure is a public health concern. The impacts of environmental heat on mortality and morbidity at the population scale are well documented, but little is known about specific exposures that individuals experience.

Objectives:
The first objective of this work was to catalyze discussion of the role of personal heat exposure information in research and risk assessment. The second objective was to provide guidance regarding the operationalization of personal heat exposure research methods.

Discussion:
We define personal heat exposure as realized contact between a person and an indoor or outdoor environment that poses a risk of increases in body core temperature and/or perceived discomfort. Personal heat exposure can be measured directly with wearable monitors or estimated indirectly through the combination of time–activity and meteorological data sets. Complementary information to understand individual-scale drivers of behavior, susceptibility, and health and comfort outcomes can be collected from additional monitors, surveys, interviews, ethnographic approaches, and additional social and health data sets. Personal exposure research can help reveal the extent of exposure misclassification that occurs when individual exposure to heat is estimated using ambient temperature measured at fixed sites and can provide insights for epidemiological risk assessment concerning extreme heat.

Conclusions:
Personal heat exposure research provides more valid and precise insights into how often people encounter heat conditions and when, where, to whom, and why these encounters occur. Published literature on personal heat exposure is limited to date, but existing studies point to opportunities to inform public health practice regarding extreme heat, particularly where fine-scale precision is needed to reduce health consequences of heat exposure.

ContributorsKuras, Evan R. (Author) / Richardson, Molly B. (Author) / Calkins, Mirian M. (Author) / Ebi, Kristie L. (Author) / Gohlke, Julia M. (Author) / Hess, Jeremy J. (Author) / Hondula, David M. (Author) / Kintziger, Kristina W. (Author) / Jagger, Meredith A. (Author) / Middel, Ariane (Author) / Scott, Anna A. (Author) / Spector, June T. (Contributor) / Uejio, Christopher K. (Author) / Vanos, Jennifer K. (Author) / Zaitchik, Benjamin F. (Author)
Created2017-08
141441-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Objectives: To provide novel quantification and advanced measurements of surface temperatures (Ts) in playgrounds, employing multiple scales of data, and provide insight into hot-hazard mitigation techniques and designs for improved environmental and public health.

Methods: We conduct an analysis of Ts in two Metro-Phoenix playgrounds at three scales: neighborhood (1 km

Objectives: To provide novel quantification and advanced measurements of surface temperatures (Ts) in playgrounds, employing multiple scales of data, and provide insight into hot-hazard mitigation techniques and designs for improved environmental and public health.

Methods: We conduct an analysis of Ts in two Metro-Phoenix playgrounds at three scales: neighborhood (1 km resolution), microscale (6.8 m resolution), and touch-scale (1 cm resolution). Data were derived from two sources: airborne remote sensing (neighborhood and microscale) and in situ (playground site) infrared Ts (touch-scale). Metrics of surface-to-air temperature deltas (Ts–a) and scale offsets (errors) are introduced.

Results: Select in situ Ts in direct sunlight are shown to approach or surpass values likely to result in burns to children at touch-scales much finer than Ts resolved by airborne remote sensing. Scale offsets based on neighbourhood and microscale ground observations are 3.8 ◦C and 7.3 ◦C less than the Ts–a at the 1 cm touch-scale, respectively, and 6.6 ◦C and 10.1 ◦C lower than touch-scale playground equipment Ts, respectively. Hence, the coarser scales underestimate high Ts within playgrounds. Both natural (tree) and artificial (shade sail) shade types are associated with significant reductions in Ts.

Conclusions: A scale mismatch exists based on differing methods of urban Ts measurement. The sub-meter touch-scale is the spatial scale at which data must be collected and policies of urban landscape design and health must be executed in order to mitigate high Ts in high-contact environments such as playgrounds. Shade implementation is the most promising mitigation technique to reduce child burns, increase park usability, and mitigate urban heating.

ContributorsVanos, Jennifer K. (Author) / Middel, Ariane (Author) / McKercher, Grant R. (Author) / Kuras, Evan R. (Author) / Ruddell, Benjamin L. (Author)
Created2015-11-10
188186-Thumbnail Image.png
Description

Abstract:

Cascading failures across a network propagate localized issues to more broad and potentially unexpected failures in the network. In power networks, where load must be delivered in real-time by a generation source, network layout is an important part of cascading failure analysis. In lieu of real power network data protected

Abstract:

Cascading failures across a network propagate localized issues to more broad and potentially unexpected failures in the network. In power networks, where load must be delivered in real-time by a generation source, network layout is an important part of cascading failure analysis. In lieu of real power network data protected for security reasons, we can use synthetic networks for academic purposes in developing a validating methodology. A contingency analysis technique is used to identify cascading failures, and this involves randomly selecting initial failure points in the network and observing how current violations propagate across the network. This process is repeated many times to understand the breadth of potential failures that may occur, and the observed trends in failure propagation are analyzed and compared to generate recommendations to prevent and adapt to failure. Emphasis is placed on power transmission networks where failures can be more catastrophic.

ContributorsSparks, Ryan M. (Author) / Hoff, Ryan (Michael) (Author) / Johnson, Nathan (Author) / Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author)