Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4444651 Atmospheric Environment 2006 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Daily average PM10 concentrations of 71 stations in Taiwan in wintertime (October to March) and summertime periods (April to September) were fitted individually by a lognormal distribution for a 2 yr period (2001 to 2002). The distribution parameters (geometric mean and geometric standard deviation) in wintertime were used to determine the air-quality basins for PM10 by utilizing three clustering techniques, viz. of hierarchical clustering (Ward's method), non-hierarchical clustering (K-means) and two-level approach (self-organizing maps neural network, then K-means clustering). All three techniques suggested that 71 air-monitoring stations in Taiwan can be divided into five air-quality basins which are located in northern, central, eastern, southwestern and southern Taiwan, respectively. The sequence of PM10 pollution levels in the five basins is southern Taiwan>southwestern Taiwan>central Taiwan>northern Taiwan>eastern Taiwan. Geometric means and geometric standard deviations in each of the five air-quality basins were significantly different from each other for the two-level approach method by the Waller–Duncan k-ratio t  -test (k=100k=100, P=0.05P=0.05), suggesting that the two-level approach method is best among the three clustering methods. The clustering results of five air-quality basins in Taiwan are useful to decide the corresponding control strategy at different air-quality basins.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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