Author:
McNeill Jacob,Snider Graydon,Weagle Crystal L.,Walsh Brenna,Bissonnette Paul,Stone Emily,Abboud Ihab,Akoshile Clement,Anh Nguyen Xuan,Balasubramanian Rajasekhar,Brook Jeffrey R.,Coburn Craig,Cohen Aaron,Dong Jinlu,Gagnon Graham,Garland Rebecca M.,He Kebin,Holben Brent N.,Kahn Ralph,Kim Jong Sung,Lagrosas Nofel,Lestari Puji,Liu Yang,Jeba Farah,Joy Khaled Shaifullah,Martins J. Vanderlei,Misra Amit,Norford Leslie K.,Quel Eduardo J.,Salam Abdus,Schichtel Bret,Tripathi S. N.,Wang Chien,Zhang Qiang,Brauer Michael,Gibson Mark D.,Rudich Yinon,Martin Randall V.
Abstract
AbstractGlobally consistent measurements of airborne metal concentrations in fine particulate matter (PM2.5) are important for understanding potential health impacts, prioritizing air pollution mitigation strategies, and enabling global chemical transport model development. PM2.5 filter samples (N ~ 800 from 19 locations) collected from a globally distributed surface particulate matter sampling network (SPARTAN) between January 2013 and April 2019 were analyzed for particulate mass and trace metals content. Metal concentrations exhibited pronounced spatial variation, primarily driven by anthropogenic activities. PM2.5 levels of lead, arsenic, chromium, and zinc were significantly enriched at some locations by factors of 100–3000 compared to crustal concentrations. Levels of metals in PM2.5 and PM10 exceeded health guidelines at multiple sites. For example, Dhaka and Kanpur sites exceeded the US National Ambient Air 3-month Quality Standard for lead (150 ng m−3). Kanpur, Hanoi, Beijing and Dhaka sites had annual mean arsenic concentrations that approached or exceeded the World Health Organization’s risk level for arsenic (6.6 ng m−3). The high concentrations of several potentially harmful metals in densely populated cites worldwide motivates expanded measurements and analyses.
Funder
Bloomberg Philanthropies
ClimateWorks Foundation
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
27 articles.
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