Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6326931 | Science of The Total Environment | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The mean PM2.5 mass concentration (21.0 μg mâ 3) was just below the 25 μg mâ 3 annual mean PM2.5 limit value set by the European Commission and showed a seasonal pattern with higher levels during winter. On average, 84% of the gravimetric mass could be reconstructed by the chemical measurements. Organic matter and secondary inorganic ions were the most dominant PM2.5 constituents contributing 40 and 29% of its mass, respectively. Changes in the yearly concentrations were not identified for the investigated compounds between 2010 and 2013. Temporal differences in both ascorbate and glutathione oxidation could be observed during the 3-year long sampling period; however, no clear seasonal trend was apparent. OP metrics were associated mainly with traffic-related trace elements; however, other PM sources (i.e., long-range transport, secondary aerosol formation) could also contribute to particulate OP in Budapest. The weak correlation between OP metrics and PM2.5 mass concentration suggests the possibility of using OP as an additional metric in epidemiology.
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Authors
Tamás Szigeti, Mihály Ãvári, Christina Dunster, Frank J. Kelly, Franco Lucarelli, Gyula Záray,