L
Lidia Morawska
Researcher at Queensland University of Technology
Publications - 777
Citations - 132997
Lidia Morawska is an academic researcher from Queensland University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Particle number & Ultrafine particle. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 746 publications receiving 95412 citations. Previous affiliations of Lidia Morawska include University of Surrey & Jinan University.
Papers
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The effect of ETS and other combustion products on the indoor concentration levels of radon progeny and activity size spectrum
Lidia Morawska,Milan Jamriska +1 more
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Secondhand smoke in public places in Vietnam: An assessment 5 years after implementation of the tobacco control law.
TL;DR: The study results indicate an improvement in air quality in public places in Vietnam via both the reduction in PM2.5 levels and the number of people observed smoking, however, greater enforcement of the free-smoke legislation is needed to eliminate SHS in public Places in Vietnam.
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Improved morbidity-based air quality health index development using Bayesian multi-pollutant weighted model.
Wen-Zhong Huang,Geert van Geest,Wen-Zhong Huang,Wei-Yun He,Luke D. Knibbs,Bin Jalaludin,Yuming Guo,Lidia Morawska,Joachim Heinrich,Duohong Chen,Yunjiang Yu,Xiao-Wen Zeng,Hong-Yao Yu,Bo-Yi Yang,Li-Wen Hu,Ru-Qing Liu,Wen-Ru Feng,Guang-Hui Dong +17 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the utility of AQHIs constructed by different models and health outcomes, and determined a better AQHI construction strategy based on the daily time-series outpatient visits and hospital admissions from 299 hospitals (January 2016-December 2018), and mortality (January 2017-December 2019).
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Air Quality in the Sydney Metropolitan Region during the 2013 Blue Mountains Wildfire
TL;DR: In the case of the 2013 Blue Mountains Fire, the concentrations of PM10 and PM2.5 increased by more than two fold (>200%) and remained high for a week as discussed by the authors.
Journal Article
CO2 emissions from the combustion of native Australian trees
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified CO2 emission factors for five common tree species found in South East Queensland forests, as well as several grasses taken from savannah lands in the Northern Territory of Australia, under controlled "fast burning" and "slow burning" laboratory conditions.