VOC Index vs TVOC

VOC Index is a relative signal from a MOX gas sensor. TVOC is a concentration-style lab concept. They should not be collapsed into the same claim.

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VOC measurement graphic used for VOC Index context.
Interactive chart - coming soon
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TVOC usually means a summed concentration of volatile organic compounds under a defined analytical method. VOC Index is different: Sensirion designed it as a normalized, adaptive indicator of indoor VOC events relative to a recent baseline. It is useful for detecting change, not for naming or quantifying every compound in the room.

A VOC Index rise can come from cleaning products, cooking, solvents, fragrance, off-gassing materials, or other reducing gases. The sensor does not identify benzene, formaldehyde, ethanol, limonene, or any other compound by name. The software layer can infer source likelihood only from timing, co-movement, and context.

That distinction protects the user. A high VOC Index is a reason to ventilate, identify the source, or reduce exposure. It is not a lab report, occupational exposure measurement, or proof that a specific chemical exceeded a regulatory threshold.

On Terrestream pages, the correct label is VOC Index, not TVOC, unless the copy is explicitly discussing the difference. The measurement evidence page applies that convention across charts and claims.

References

  1. Sensirion - SEN66 datasheet and VOC index info sensirion.com
  2. Sensirion - VOC/NOx Gas Index Algorithm sensirion.com
  3. Sensirion VOC building-standards conversion note (PDF)
  4. Sensirion SEN66 datasheet (PDF)