A QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF SOURCE CONTRIBUTIONS TO INHALABLE PARTICULATE MATTER POLLUTION IN METROPOLITAN BOSTON


Autoria(s): GEORGE D. THURSTON; JOHN D.SPENGLER
Data(s)

1985

Resumo

In this paper, source apportionment techniques are employed to identify and quantify the major particle pollution source classes affecting a monitoring site in metropolitan Boston, MA. A Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of paniculate elemental data allows the estimation of mass contributions for five fine mass panicle source classes (soil, motor vehicle, coal related, oil and salt aerosols), and six coarse panicle source classes (soil, motor vehicle, refuse incineration, residual oil, salt and sulfate aerosols). Also derived are the elemental characteristics of those source aerosols and their contributions to the total recorded elemental concentrations (i.e. an elemental mass balance). These are estimated by applying a new approach to apportioning mass among various PCA source components: the calculation of Absolute Principal Component Scores, and the subsequent regression of daily mass and elemental concentrations on these scores.

Identificador

http://ir.yic.ac.cn/handle/133337/3056

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/140013

Idioma(s)

英语

Fonte

GEORGE D. THURSTON ;JOHN D.SPENGLER.A QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF SOURCE CONTRIBUTIONS TO INHALABLE PARTICULATE MATTER POLLUTION IN METROPOLITAN BOSTON,Atmospheric Environment,1985,19(1):9-25

Palavras-Chave #Aerosols #dichotomous sampler #elemental composition #inhalable particles #particles #pollution sources #pollution transport #principal component analysis #selenium #source apportionment #sulfur #trace metals
Tipo

期刊论文