Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6337160 | Atmospheric Environment | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
PM2.5 variances have adverse impacts on human beings and the environment; therefore, source apportionment is very important and is a hot global topic. In this work, a new model called WALSPMF is proposed and evaluated for its accuracy. First, a synthetic test was carried out to compare the estimated source profile and contributions with the synthetic ones. Average absolute error (AAE) values were also calculated between the estimated and synthetic source contributions; most of the values were low (<15%), which indicated that the results of the WALSPMF model might be acceptable. Next, samples of PM2.5 were collected from a large harbour sampling site in China (Tanggu). The PM2.5 mean level was 110.63 μg mâ3, with a range of 28.67 μg mâ3-302.17 μg mâ3. The ambient PM2.5 dataset was separately introduced into both the WALSPMF and EPAPMF 5.0 models to identify the possible sources and their contributions. Five source categories were extracted by the two models and can be identified in the following consistent order: coal combustion (33% for WALSPMF, 30% for EPAPMF 5.0), secondary nitrate (19% for WALSPMF, 21% for EPAPMF 5.0), crustal dust (18% for WALSPMF, 22% for EPAPMF 5.0), secondary sulphate (16% for WALSPMF, 15% for EPAPMF 5.0), and vehicle exhaust (14% for WALSPMF, 12% for EPAPMF 5.0). The positive results of multiple verifications suggested good performance of the WALSPMF model; thus, it is essential to put this new model forward as a way to potentially enrich the modern source apportionment technique.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Guo-Liang Shi, Jiao Xu, Xing Peng, Ying-Ze Tian, Wei Wang, Bo Han, Yu-Fen Zhang, Yin-Chang Feng, Armistead G. Russell,