Identification of haze-creating sources from fine particulate matter in Dhaka aerosol using carbon fractions

被引:13
|
作者
Begum, Bilkis A. [1 ]
Hopke, Philip K. [2 ]
机构
[1] Atom Energy Ctr, Div Chem, Dhaka, Bangladesh
[2] Clarkson Univ, Inst Sustainable Environm, Potsdam, NY 13699 USA
关键词
POSITIVE MATRIX FACTORIZATION; PIXE SOFTWARE PACKAGE; AIR-QUALITY; ATMOSPHERIC AEROSOL; BANGLADESH; POLLUTION; MEGACITIES; MODELS; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1080/10962247.2013.784716
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) samples were simultaneously collected on Teflon and quartz filters between February 2010 and February 2011 at an urban monitoring site (CAMS2) in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The samples were collected using AirMetrics MiniVol samplers. The samples on Teflon filters were analyzed for their elemental composition by PIXE and PESA. Particulate carbon on quartz filters was analyzed using the IMPROVE thermal optical reflectance (TOR) method that divides carbon into four organic carbons (OC), pyrolized organic carbon (OP), and three elemental carbon (EC) fractions. The data were analyzed by positive matrix factorization using the PMF2 program. Initially, only total OC and total EC were included in the analysis and five sources, including road dust, sea salt and Zn, soil dust, motor vehicles, and brick kilns, were obtained. In the second analysis, the eight carbon fractions (OC1, OC2, OC3, OC4, OP, EC1, EC2, EC3) were included in order to ascertain whether additional source information could be extracted from the data. In this case, it is possible to identify more sources than with only total OC and EC. The motor vehicle source was separated into gasoline and diesel emissions and a fugitive Pb source was identified. Brick kilns contribute 7.9 g/m(3) and 6.0 g/m(3) of OC and EC, respectively, to the fine particulate matter based on the two results. From the estimated mass extinction coefficients and the apportioned source contributions, soil dust, brick kiln, diesel, gasoline, and the Pb sources were found to contribute most strongly to visibility degradation, particularly in the winter. Implications: Fine particle concentrations in Dhaka, Bangladesh, are very high and cause significant degradation of urban visibility. This work shows that using carbon fraction data from the IMPROVE OC/EC protocol provides improved source apportionment. Soil dust, brick kiln, diesel, gasoline, and the Pb sources contribute strongly to haze, particularly in the winter.
引用
收藏
页码:1046 / 1057
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Identification of Sources of Fine and Coarse Particulate Matter in Dhaka, Bangladesh
    Begum, Bilkis A.
    Biswas, Swapan K.
    Markwitz, Andreas
    Hopke, Philip K.
    [J]. AEROSOL AND AIR QUALITY RESEARCH, 2010, 10 (04) : 345 - U1514
  • [2] Identification of Sources from Chemical Characterization of Fine Particulate Matter and Assessment of Ambient Air Quality in Dhaka, Bangladesh
    Begum, Bilkis A.
    Hopke, Philip K.
    [J]. AEROSOL AND AIR QUALITY RESEARCH, 2019, 19 (01) : 118 - 128
  • [3] Quantifying the sources of ozone, fine particulate matter, and regional haze in the Southeastern United States
    Odman, M. Talat
    Hu, Yongtao
    Russell, Armistead G.
    Hanedar, Asude
    Boylan, James W.
    Brewer, Patricia F.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2009, 90 (10) : 3155 - 3168
  • [4] Identification of Sources of Fine Particulate Matter in Kandy, Sri Lanka
    Seneviratne, Shirani
    Handagiripathira, Lakmali
    Sanjeevani, Sisara
    Madusha, Dulanjalee
    Waduge, Vajira Ariyaratna Ariyaratna
    Attanayake, Thilaka
    Bandara, Deepthi
    Hopke, Philip K.
    [J]. AEROSOL AND AIR QUALITY RESEARCH, 2017, 17 (02) : 476 - 484
  • [5] Sources of organic carbon in fine particulate matter in northern European urban air
    Saarikoski, S.
    Timonen, H.
    Saarnio, K.
    Aurela, M.
    Jarvi, L.
    Keronen, P.
    Kerminen, V. -M.
    Hillamo, R.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2008, 8 (20) : 6281 - 6295
  • [6] Composition, components and sources of fine aerosol fractions using multielemental EDXRF analysis
    Marcazzan, GM
    Ceriani, M
    Valli, G
    Vecchi, R
    [J]. X-RAY SPECTROMETRY, 2004, 33 (04) : 267 - 272
  • [7] Evaluation of methods for characterizing the fine particulate matter emissions from aircraft and other diffusion flame combustion aerosol sources
    Giannelli, Robert
    Stevens, Jeffrey
    Kinsey, John S.
    Kittelson, David
    Zelenyuk, Alla
    Howard, Robert
    Forde, Mary
    Hoffman, Brandon
    Leggett, Cullen
    Maeroff, Bruce
    Bies, Nick
    Swanson, Jacob
    Suski, Kaitlyn
    Payne, Gregory
    Manin, Julien
    Frazee, Richard
    Onasch, Timothy B.
    Freedman, Andrew
    Khalek, Imad
    Badshah, Huzeifa
    Preece, Daniel
    Premnath, Vinay
    Agnew, Scott
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AEROSOL SCIENCE, 2024, 178
  • [8] Atmospheric emissions of hexachlorobutadiene in fine particulate matter from industrial sources
    Zhao, Chenyan
    Yang, Lili
    Sun, Yuxiang
    Chen, Changzhi
    Huang, Zichun
    Yang, Qiuting
    Yun, Jianghui
    Habib, Ahsan
    Liu, Guorui
    Zheng, Minghui
    Jiang, Guibin
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 15 (01)
  • [9] Occurrence and sources of chromophoric organic carbon in fine particulate matter over Xi'an, China
    Li, Jinwen
    Chen, Qingcai
    Hua, Xiaoyu
    Chang, Tian
    Wang, Yuqin
    [J]. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 725
  • [10] Evaluation of Coarse and Fine Particulate Sources Using a Portable Aerosol Monitor in a Desert Community
    Robert N. Phalen
    Ted Coleman
    [J]. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 2012, 89 : 380 - 383