Correlation of nitrogen dioxide with other traffic pollutants near a major expressway
This study addresses three objectives: (1) to assess the correlation of NO 2 to other ambient pollutants measured with passive samplers; (2) to explore peak traffic particulate matter air pollution correlations with passively measured NO 2; and (3) to pilot an advanced mobile air pollution laborator...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric environment (1994) 2008, Vol.42 (2), p.275-290 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study addresses three objectives: (1) to assess the correlation of NO
2 to other ambient pollutants measured with passive samplers; (2) to explore peak traffic particulate matter air pollution correlations with passively measured NO
2; and (3) to pilot an advanced mobile air pollution laboratory to supply supplementary information on correlations between NO
2 and other air pollutants.
Active and passive monitoring was conducted at two transects perpendicular to an expressway with nearly 400,000 vehicles per day. NO
2, NO
x
, O
3, VOCs, fine-particles and ultrafine particles were measured at increasing distance away from the expressway. The measurement equipment included Ogawa, TraceAir and 3
M organic vapor monitors (OVM-3500) passive samplers, and an array of active measurement equipment: Dust-Trak and P-Trak monitors, chemoluminescent analyzer, aethalometer, tapered element oscillating microbalance, Grimm condensation particle counter, and an Ionicon analytik proton transfer reaction mass spectrometer.
Levels of NO
2 were observed to decay with increasing distance from the expressway, declining to background levels by 300
m. Moderate to high correlations were observed between passive NO
2 measurements and passive NO
x
, O
3 (
r∼0.60–0.86). The correlations with active PM measurements made with Dust-Trak and P-Trak monitors were in the range 0.64–0.78; correlations between NO
2 and VOCs were more variable. Active measurements of NO
2 and PM
2.5, ultrafine particles, O
3 and black carbon, had high correlations (
r∼0.7–0.96).
The variability of many traffic-related pollutants around an expressway is characterized well by passive measurements of NO
2. Further research is needed to assess whether these relationships hold in different traffic and land-use environments. |
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ISSN: | 1352-2310 1873-2844 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2007.09.042 |