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Fine particle concentrations in buses and taxis in Florence, Italy
AbstractOn October 2004, a sampling survey was carried out in Florence to estimate urban fine particle exposure concentrations inside commuting vehicles during workdays characterized by heavy traffic. Portable samplers were positioned inside four regularly scheduled diesel-powered buses and four taxis during eight weekdays. Each sampler consisted of a 2.5μm size pre-separator cyclone, a direct-reading data logging photometer (pDR-1200), and a 4Lmin−1 filter sampler for the determination of PM2.5 mass concentration. Based on reflectance analysis measurements, a PM2.5 Black Smoke Index was determined for each filter, and the elemental composition of the PM2.5 was analyzed by Particle Induced X-ray Emission (PIXE). PM2.5 mass concentrations inside the vehicles correlated well with the urban ambient air PM2.5 concentrations measured at the fixed-site monitoring stations. The PM2.5 excess above the urban ambient level was on average 32μgm−3 (range: 22–52μgm−3) and 20μgm−3 (range: 11–29μgm−3) in buses and taxis, respectively. The PM2.5-bound sulfur concentration was also higher in the buses than in the taxis. Based on daily Time-Microenvironment-Activity-Diary (TMAD) data, the Florentines spend on average 9.7% of their day in traffic, and the corresponding average exposure is approximately 12% of their daily PM2.5 personal exposure. The obtained data could be used to plan interventions to minimize the PM2.5 citizen exposures in commuting.
Fine particle concentrations in buses and taxis in Florence, Italy
AbstractOn October 2004, a sampling survey was carried out in Florence to estimate urban fine particle exposure concentrations inside commuting vehicles during workdays characterized by heavy traffic. Portable samplers were positioned inside four regularly scheduled diesel-powered buses and four taxis during eight weekdays. Each sampler consisted of a 2.5μm size pre-separator cyclone, a direct-reading data logging photometer (pDR-1200), and a 4Lmin−1 filter sampler for the determination of PM2.5 mass concentration. Based on reflectance analysis measurements, a PM2.5 Black Smoke Index was determined for each filter, and the elemental composition of the PM2.5 was analyzed by Particle Induced X-ray Emission (PIXE). PM2.5 mass concentrations inside the vehicles correlated well with the urban ambient air PM2.5 concentrations measured at the fixed-site monitoring stations. The PM2.5 excess above the urban ambient level was on average 32μgm−3 (range: 22–52μgm−3) and 20μgm−3 (range: 11–29μgm−3) in buses and taxis, respectively. The PM2.5-bound sulfur concentration was also higher in the buses than in the taxis. Based on daily Time-Microenvironment-Activity-Diary (TMAD) data, the Florentines spend on average 9.7% of their day in traffic, and the corresponding average exposure is approximately 12% of their daily PM2.5 personal exposure. The obtained data could be used to plan interventions to minimize the PM2.5 citizen exposures in commuting.
Fine particle concentrations in buses and taxis in Florence, Italy
Fondelli, M. Cristina (author) / Chellini, Elisabetta (author) / Yli-Tuomi, Tarja (author) / Cenni, Isabella (author) / Gasparrini, Antonio (author) / Nava, Silvia (author) / Garcia-Orellana, Isabel (author) / Lupi, Andrea (author) / Grechi, Daniele (author) / Mallone, Sandra (author)
Atmospheric Environment ; 42 ; 8185-8193
2008-07-28
9 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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