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1.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38874903

RESUMEN

Communities near transportation sources can be impacted by higher concentrations of particulate matter (PM) and other air pollutants. Few studies have reported on air quality in complex urban environments with multiple transportation sources. To better understand these environments, the Kansas City Transportation and Local-Scale Air Quality Study (KC-TRAQS) was conducted in three neighborhoods in Southeast Kansas City, Kansas. This area has several emissions sources including transportation (railyards, vehicles, diesel trucks), light industry, commercial facilities, and residential areas. Stationary samples were collected for 1-year (October 24, 2017 to October 312,018) at six sites using traditional sampling methods and lower-cost air sensor packages. This work examines PM less than 2.5 µm in diameter (PM2.5), black carbon (BC), and trace metals data collected during KC-TRAQS. PM2.5 filter samples showed the highest 24-h mean concentrations (9.34 µg/m3) at the sites located within 20-50 m of the railyard. Mean 24-h PM2.5 concentrations, ranging from 7.96 to 9.34 µg/m3, at all sites were lower than that of the nearby regulatory site (9.83µµg/m3). Daily maximum PM2.5 concentrations were higher at the KC-TRAQS sites (ranging from 25.31 to 43.76 µg/m3) compared to the regulatory site (20.50 µg/m3), suggesting short-duration impacts of localized emissions sources. Across the KC-TRAQS sites, 24-h averaged PM2.5 concentrations from the sensor package (p-POD) ranged from 3.24 to 5.69 µg/m3 showing that, out-of-the-box, the PM sensor underestimated the reference concentrations. KC-TRAQS was supplemented by elemental and organic carbon (EC/OC) and trace metal analysis of filter samples. The EC/OC data suggested the presence of secondary organic aerosol formation, with highest mean concentrations observed at the site within 20 m of the railyard. Trace metals data showed daily, monthly, and seasonal variations for iron, copper, zinc, chromium, and nickel, with elevated concentrations occurring during the summer at most of the sites. Implication statement This work reports on findings from a year-long air quality study in Southeast Kansas City, Kansas to understand micro-scale air quality in neighborhoods which are impacted by multiple emissions sources such as transportation sources (including a large railyard operation), light industry, commercial facilities, and residential areas. Fixed-site measurements were collected with traditional samplers and lower-cost air sensors. This work expands on previously published work providing an overview of KC-TRAQS (Chemosensors, 7, 26, 2019, doi:10.3390/chemosensors7020026), and provides further details specifically on PM2.5, EC/OC, and trace metals analysis of the filter samples collected in the study area. While dozens of studies have reported on air quality near roadways, this work will provide more information on air quality near other transportation sources in particular railyards. This work can also inform additional field studies near railyards and promote the use and evaluation of newer technologies such as air sensors to collect data near transportation sources.

2.
J Air Waste Manag Assoc ; 74(1): 39-51, 2024 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37921558

RESUMEN

This paper focuses on the impact of solid barriers located upwind of a highway in reducing vehicle related concentrations that occur downwind of the roadway, compared to a highway without barriers. Measurements made in the United States Environmental Protection Agency's meteorological wind tunnel show that the mitigating impact of an upwind barrier is comparable to that of a downwind barrier. Upwind barriers lead to reductions in pollution concentrations by drawing emissions in from the highway toward the barrier. The emissions are then entrained into the flow above the recirculation zone and dispersed vertically as they are advected downwind. This upwind transport of vehicle emissions leads to concentrations at the center of the roadways that are roughly 200-300% higher than those measured on roadways with downwind barriers. This difference between on-road concentrations indicates that although both types of barriers mitigate the impact of vehicle emissions downwind of a roadway, the upwind barrier may create adverse air quality impacts for the people on the road.We have formulated a semiempirical dispersion model that incorporates the physics revealed by the wind tunnel measurements. This model improves upon a model proposed by Ahangar et al. (2017) by adjusting the wind speed to get a more realistic plume dispersion just downwind of the upwind barrier and also by providing vertical profiles of concentrations in addition to ground-level concentrations. The upwind barrier model proposed in this paper and the downwind barrier model described in Francisco et al. (2022) have been incorporated into AERMOD (version 21112) as a nonregulatory option, including the new two-barrier option when modeling both barriers on the same roadway.Implications: Our paper presents an air dispersion model algorithm for modeling the effect of upwind noise barriers on dispersion of traffic-related emissions from roadways, which was incorporated into EPA's AERMOD and then evaluated using observations from a wind tunnel experiment. The results are compared and contrasted with results from both a no-barrier case and downwind barrier cases. This manuscript expands on previously published work analyzing the effect of barrier height and source-to-barrier distance on downwind dispersion (Atmos. Pollut. Res., 13:101385, 2022, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apr.2022.101385). The current manuscript uses the same wind tunnel setup as reported there, but focuses on a different subset of cases, namely the upwind barrier cases, when developing dispersion model algorithms to simulate the observed effects. We believe the evaluations of the vertical profiles from the wind tunnel study, development, and incorporation of the upwind barrier algorithms into AERMOD, and model evaluation of these new algorithms are significant contributions to understanding the effects of these commonly used roadside barriers.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Contaminación del Aire , Humanos , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Emisiones de Vehículos/análisis , Material Particulado/análisis , Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Contaminación del Aire/prevención & control , Contaminación del Aire/análisis
3.
Atmos Pollut Res ; 13(4): 1-101385, 2022 Mar 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35450153

RESUMEN

New results are presented from wind tunnel studies performed at the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), which include cases with solid roadside barriers of varying heights and cases with varying distances between the line source (roadway) and a 6-m-tall barrier. The Source-to-Barrier Distance cases include seven lanes of traffic with each lane acting as an independent source of continuous emissions along a line (i.e., line source). A mixed-wake algorithm that accounts for barrier effects within a steady-state air dispersion model was updated based on the recent wind tunnel studies. To study the effects of a solid roadside barrier, varying barrier heights and varying distances between the line source and barrier were modeled with the U.S. EPA regulatory air dispersion model AERMOD (v. 21112) using the line-source option that includes an experimental barrier option (RLINEXT). The mixed-wake algorithm reproduced the shape of the vertical concentration profiles observed in the wind tunnel data, including the uniform concentration profile from the ground vertically to a height somewhat greater than the height of the barrier. The algorithm responded appropriately to changes in barrier height and source-to-barrier distance, producing greater reductions in ground-level concentrations for taller barriers and for shorter source-to-barrier distances. Additionally, a rule of thumb that approximates the effect of a downwind barrier was formulated by converting an estimated vertical dispersion into an additional travel distance. The wind tunnel results, the update to the mixed-wake algorithm, and a comparison of the two data sets are described in this paper.

4.
Atmos Environ (1994) ; 2582021 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34526852

RESUMEN

Following the release of a harmful substance within an urban environment, buildings and street canyons create complex flow regimes that affect dispersion and localized effluent concentrations. While some fast-response dispersion models can capture the effects caused by individual buildings, further research is required to refine urban characterizations such as plume channeling and spreading, and initial dispersion, especially within the presence of a nonhomogeneous array of structures. Field, laboratory, and modeling experiments that simulate urban or industrial releases are critical in advancing current dispersion models. This project leverages the configuration of buildings used in a full-scale, mock urban field study to examine the concentrations of a neutrally buoyant tracer in a series of wind tunnel and Embedded Large Eddy Simulation (ELES) experiments. The behavior, propagation, and magnitude of the plumes were examined and compared to identify microscale effects. After demonstrating excellent quantitative and qualitative comparisons between the wind tunnel and ELES via lateral and vertical concentration profiles, we show that a nonlinear least squares fit of the Gaussian plume equation well represents these profiles, even within the array of buildings and network of street canyons. The initial plume dispersion depended strongly on the structures immediately adjacent to the release, and consequently, the near-surface plume spread very rapidly in the first few street canyons downwind of the source. The ELES modeling showed that under slightly oblique incoming wind directions of 5° and 15°, an additional 5° and 14° off-axis channeling of the plume occurred at ground level, respectively. This indicates how building structures can cause considerable plume drift from the otherwise expected centerline axis, especially with greater wind obliquity. Additionally, AERMOD was used to represent the class of fast-running, Gaussian dispersion models to inform where these types of models may be usefully applied within urban areas or groups of buildings. Using an urban wind speed profile and other parameters that may be locally available after a release, AERMOD was shown to qualitatively represent the ground-level plume while somewhat underestimating peak concentrations. It also overestimated the lateral plume spread and was challenged in the very near-field to the source. Adding a turbulence profile from the ELES data into AERMOD's meteorological input improved model estimates of lateral plume spread and centerline concentrations, although peak concentration values were still underestimated in the far field. Finally, we offer some observations and suggestions for Gaussian dispersion modeling based on this mock urban modeling exercise.

5.
Atmos Pollut Res ; 12(2): 367-374, 2021 Feb 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33746529

RESUMEN

This paper presents an analysis of data from a wind tunnel study conducted to examine the dispersion of emissions at the edges of near-road noise barriers. The study is motivated by the concern that a barrier positioned downwind of a roadway may guide highly polluted plumes along the barrier leading to heightened concentrations as the plume spills around and downwind of the barrier end. The wind tunnel database consists of measurements of dispersion around a simulated roadway segment with various noise barrier configurations. Each roadway segment simulated in the wind tunnel had full-scale equivalent dimensions of 135 m long. Barrier segments, 135 m long with a height (H) of 6 m, were located on the downwind side of the source at a distance of 18 m from it (measured perpendicularly from the line source). Examination of the concentration patterns associated with the cases indicates that 1) vertical mixing induced by barriers persists at crosswind distances up to the edge (lateral end) of the barrier and downwind distances of x/H = 10, 2) concentration levels at all heights below z/H = 1 increase towards the edge of the barrier at downwind distances less than x/H = 7, and 3) concentration is well mixed in the vertical at the edge of the barrier, and the levels can be higher than in the middle of the barrier even when the source ends at the edge of the barrier. We have formulated a parameterization that captures the major features of these observations and can be incorporated in models such as RLINE.

6.
J Environ Monit ; 11(12): 2122-35, 2009 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20024009

RESUMEN

The Brooklyn Traffic Real-Time Ambient Pollutant Penetration and Environmental Dispersion (B-TRAPPED) field study examined indoor and outdoor exposure to traffic-generated air pollution by studying the individual processes of generation of traffic emissions, transport and dispersion of air contaminants along a roadway, and infiltration of the contaminants into a residence. Real-time instrumentation was used to obtain highly resolved time-series concentration profiles for a number of air pollutants. The B-TRAPPED field study was conducted in the residential Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, NY, USA, in May 2005. The neighborhood contained the Gowanus Expressway (Interstate 278), a major arterial road (4(th) Avenue), and residential side streets running perpendicular to the Gowanus Expressway and 4(th) Avenue. Synchronized measurements were obtained inside a test house, just outside the test house façade, and along the urban residential street canyon on which the house was located. A trailer containing Federal Reference Method (FRM) and real-time monitors was located next to the Gowanus Expressway to assess the source. Ultrafine particulate matter (PM), PM(2.5), nitrogen oxides (NO(x)), sulfur dioxide (SO(2)), carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO(2)), temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed and direction were monitored. Different sampling schemes were devised to focus on dispersion along the street canyon or infiltration into the test house. Results were obtained for ultrafine PM, PM(2.5), criteria gases, and wind conditions from sampling schemes focused on street canyon dispersion and infiltration. For comparison, the ultrafine PM and PM(2.5) results were compared with an existing data set from the Los Angeles area, and the criteria gas data were compared with measurements from a Vancouver epidemiologic study. Measured ultrafine PM and PM(2.5) concentration levels along the residential urban street canyon and at the test house façade in Sunset Park were demonstrated to be comparable to traffic levels at an arterial road and slightly higher than those in a residential area of Los Angeles. Indoor ultrafine PM levels were roughly 3-10 times lower than outdoor levels, depending on the monitor location. CO, NO(2), and SO(2) levels were shown to be similar to values that produced increased risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease hospitalizations in the Vancouver studies.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Atmósfera/química , Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Material Particulado/análisis , Emisiones de Vehículos/análisis , Contaminación del Aire Interior/análisis , Monóxido de Carbono/análisis , Cinética , Modelos Teóricos , Ciudad de Nueva York , Dióxido de Nitrógeno/análisis , Dióxido de Azufre/análisis , Viento
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