Have to excuse the lovely title, but it is directly to the point. I installed a bme680 at a location that has a male cat. I was seeing shocking bad IAQ numbers and "CO2 estimated" levels. It was higher levels than I ever thought I'd see and way above my first deployment of the BME680s. My first installation, I only would see above IAQ of 60, if I was frying something on the stove or using my freeze dryer. The max was arount 174, I think, despite this high number it didn't last for long. What I was seeing at this new location was an IAQ of 170-211 constantly.
To understand how bad this is there are some charts that show the Air quality index...
This bme680 sensor also returns "CO2 estimated" and this level was also insanely high. I was seeing 1,700ppm - 2,000 ppm. There are articles out there such as this one that talk about how high CO2 levels can cause headaches and cognative issues.
When seeing strange results from a machine or sensors, we always have to ask ourselves some questions like "what is this actually saying?", "is this sensor working?", and "is this number real?" To figure out what the number actually means we have to consider how the TVOC devices work. They just show all VOCs and estimate the components there, so the CO2 levels could be incorrect, if I understood this right. We also could use another device to confirm that the sensors are working as expected. I did not have this available and I had no other way to test for different chemicals.
Pondering what could be causing the air quality problems I first thought of building materials. Being that it is an older house there may have been some bad chemicals they didn't know about. It could be the lenolium floors, or even some kind of gas leak issue. In the end, I can't rule them out as a factor at this point, but with some additional searching I discovered how cat urine can trigger smoke alarms due to the VOCs released.
Reading research papers for the biological field is very difficult for me to understand. In this paper, it talks about the VOCs in cat urine and some of the concentrations of those chemicals they have seen. After reading this, I do believe the largest factor of those VOCs could be the male cat at this location. In the near future, I'll be installing some more bme680 devices around the house. This would help to see if other parts are more affected than others. It will also help to confirm the results of the initial sensor.