Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8863541 | Atmospheric Environment | 2018 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
Concentrations of CMfossil were found to be almost constant during the whole period whereas biomass emissions exhibited significant seasonal variability, leading to heating period/summer ratios of 2.82 and 2.51â¯at the urban background and traffic site, respectively. During the heating period concentrations of CMbiomass summed up to 2.8â¯Î¼g/m3 (14.6% of PM10) at the urban background site compared to 2.2â¯Î¼g/m3 (11.2% of PM10) at the traffic site - being in good agreement with those determined for other European sites. The PM10 share of CMbiomass was almost equal to CMfossil at the traffic site whilst at the urban background site contributions of fossil fuel emissions were even outrun during the colder months. Additionally, data from those two sites observed during the study indicate that emissions from biomass burning processes might be of similar relevance as fossil fuel emissions in terms of exceedances of the daily PM10 limit value.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Miriam Küpper, Ulrich Quass, Astrid C. John, Heinz Kaminski, Stephan Leinert, Ludger Breuer, Dieter Gladtke, Stephan Weber, Thomas A.J. Kuhlbusch,