High-resolution sampling and analysis of ambient particulate matter in the Pearl River Delta region of southern China: source apportionment and health risk implications
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Published:2018-02-13
Issue:3
Volume:18
Page:2049-2064
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Zhou Shengzhen,Davy Perry K.,Huang Minjuan,Duan Jingbo,Wang Xuemei,Fan Qi,Chang Ming,Liu Yiming,Chen Weihua,Xie Shanju,Ancelet Travis,Trompetter William J.
Abstract
Abstract. Hazardous air pollutants, such as trace elements in
particulate matter (PM), are known or highly suspected to cause detrimental
effects on human health. To understand the sources and associated risks of PM
to human health, hourly time-integrated major trace elements in
size-segregated coarse (PM2.5–10) and fine (PM2.5) particulate
matter were collected at the industrial city of Foshan in the Pearl River
Delta region, China. Receptor modeling of the data set by positive matrix
factorization (PMF) was used to identify six sources contributing to
PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations at the site. Dominant sources
included industrial coal combustion, secondary inorganic aerosol, motor
vehicles and construction dust along with two intermittent sources (biomass
combustion and marine aerosol). The biomass combustion source was found to be
a significant contributor to peak PM2.5 episodes along with motor
vehicles and industrial coal combustion. Conditional probability function
(CPF) analysis was applied to estimate the source locations using the
PMF-resolved source contribution coupled with the surface wind direction
data. Health exposure risk of hazardous trace elements (Pb, As, Si, Cr, Mn
and Ni) and source-specific values were estimated. The total hazard quotient
(HQ) of PM2.5 was 2.09, higher than the acceptable limit (HQ = 1). The
total carcinogenic risk (CR) was 3.37 × 10−3 for PM2.5, which
was 3 times higher than the least stringent limit (1.0 × 10−4).
Among the selected trace elements, As and Pb posed the highest
non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risks to human health, respectively. In
addition, our results show that the industrial coal combustion source is the
dominant non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risk contributor, highlighting the
need for stringent control of this source. This study provides new insight
for policy makers to prioritize sources in air quality management and health
risk reduction.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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