Issue 12, 2009

Establishing a link between vehicular PM sources and PM measurements in urban street canyons

Abstract

The Brooklyn Traffic Real-Time Ambient Pollutant Penetration and Environmental Dispersion (B-TRAPPED) study, conducted in Brooklyn, NY, USA, in 2005, was designed with multiple goals in mind, two of which were contaminant source characterization and street canyon transport and dispersion monitoring. In the portion of the study described here, synchronized wind velocity and azimuth as well as particulate matter (PM) concentrations at multiple locations along 33rd Street were used to determine the feasibility of using traffic emissions in a complex urban topography as a sole tracer for studying urban contaminant transport. We demonstrate in this paper that it is possible to link downwind concentrations of contaminants in an urban street canyon to the vehicular traffic cycle using Eigen-frequency analysis. In addition, multivariable circular histograms are used to establish directional frequency maxima for wind velocity and contaminant concentration.

Graphical abstract: Establishing a link between vehicular PM sources and PM measurements in urban street canyons

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Apr 2009
Accepted
28 Sep 2009
First published
06 Nov 2009

J. Environ. Monit., 2009,11, 2146-2152

Establishing a link between vehicular PM sources and PM measurements in urban street canyons

A. D. Eisner, J. Richmond-Bryant, R. W. Wiener, I. Hahn, Z. E. Drake-Richman and W. D. Ellenson, J. Environ. Monit., 2009, 11, 2146 DOI: 10.1039/B907132F

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