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Source apportionment of fine particulate matter in Houston, TX, using organic molecular markers
AbstractUsing ambient concentrations of molecular markers, chemical mass balancing calculations have been performed to estimate the contribution of source categories to ambient fine particle levels at four sites in Houston, TX. Eight source profiles obtained using analytical methods equivalent to the techniques used in analysis of the ambient sample were used for the calculations. The chemical mass balancing model accurately reconstructed the measured concentrations of 24 molecular markers and three fine particle chemical components to estimate the contribution of each source to ambient fine particle loads. The results show that at three sites in the Houston urban area, diesel exhausts contribute between 1.6 and 3.7μgm−3 to ambient fine particle levels, while at an upwind background site, diesel exhausts represent 0.5μgm−3 of ambient fine particulate matter. Other important sources include gasoline-powered vehicles (1.1–2.8μgm−3 at three urban sites and 0.5μgm−3 at the background site); paved road dusts (1.0–2.8μgm−3 urban and 0.1μgm−3 background); meat cooking operations (0.9–1.3μgm−3 urban and 0.7μgm−3 background) and wood combustion (0.2–0.3μgm−3 urban and <0.1μgm−3 background). At one site located near the highly industrialized Houston Ship Channel, fuel oil combustion contributed an estimated 1.5μgm−3, while fuel oil combustion was not an important contribution at the other sites. Model runs using seasonally averaged data showed a high variation in source strength between seasons for some sources (i.e. paved road dusts much higher in the spring and summer than in the winter), while other sources showed little or no seasonal variation (i.e. vehicle exhausts and meat cooking operations).
Source apportionment of fine particulate matter in Houston, TX, using organic molecular markers
AbstractUsing ambient concentrations of molecular markers, chemical mass balancing calculations have been performed to estimate the contribution of source categories to ambient fine particle levels at four sites in Houston, TX. Eight source profiles obtained using analytical methods equivalent to the techniques used in analysis of the ambient sample were used for the calculations. The chemical mass balancing model accurately reconstructed the measured concentrations of 24 molecular markers and three fine particle chemical components to estimate the contribution of each source to ambient fine particle loads. The results show that at three sites in the Houston urban area, diesel exhausts contribute between 1.6 and 3.7μgm−3 to ambient fine particle levels, while at an upwind background site, diesel exhausts represent 0.5μgm−3 of ambient fine particulate matter. Other important sources include gasoline-powered vehicles (1.1–2.8μgm−3 at three urban sites and 0.5μgm−3 at the background site); paved road dusts (1.0–2.8μgm−3 urban and 0.1μgm−3 background); meat cooking operations (0.9–1.3μgm−3 urban and 0.7μgm−3 background) and wood combustion (0.2–0.3μgm−3 urban and <0.1μgm−3 background). At one site located near the highly industrialized Houston Ship Channel, fuel oil combustion contributed an estimated 1.5μgm−3, while fuel oil combustion was not an important contribution at the other sites. Model runs using seasonally averaged data showed a high variation in source strength between seasons for some sources (i.e. paved road dusts much higher in the spring and summer than in the winter), while other sources showed little or no seasonal variation (i.e. vehicle exhausts and meat cooking operations).
Source apportionment of fine particulate matter in Houston, TX, using organic molecular markers
Fraser, M.P. (author) / Yue, Z.W. (author) / Buzcu, B. (author)
Atmospheric Environment ; 37 ; 2117-2123
2003-01-20
7 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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