Exposure, Epidemiology, and Risk Program, Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Exposure, Epidemiology, and Risk Program, Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Environ Res. 2014 Aug;133:103-10. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2014.04.006. Epub 2014 Jun 4.
The effectiveness of air pollution emission control policies can be evaluated by examining ambient pollutant concentration trends that are observed at a large number of ground monitoring sites over time. In this paper, we used ground monitoring measurements in conjunction with satellite aerosol optical depth (AOD) data to investigate fine particulate matter (PM2.5; particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤ 2.5 µm) trends and their spatial patterns over a large U.S. region, New England, during 2000-2008. We examined the trends in rural and urban areas to get a better insight about the trends of regional and local source emissions. Decreases in PM2.5 concentrations (µg/m(3)) were more pronounced in urban areas than in rural ones. In addition, the highest and lowest PM2.5 decreases (µg/m(3)) were observed for winter and summer, respectively. Together, these findings suggest that primary particle concentrations decreased more relative to secondary ones. This is also supported by the analysis of the speciation data which showed that downward trends of primary pollutants including black carbon were stronger than those of secondary pollutants including sulfate. Furthermore, this study found that ambient primary pollutants decreased at the same rate as their respective source emissions. This was not the case for secondary pollutants which decreased at a slower rate than that of their precursor emissions. This indicates that concentrations of secondary pollutants depend not only on the primary emissions but also on the availability of atmospheric oxidants which might not change during the study period. This novel approach of investigating spatially varying concentration trends, in combination with ground PM2.5 species trends, can be of substantial regulatory importance.
空气污染排放控制政策的有效性可以通过考察在长时间内大量地面监测站点观测到的环境污染物浓度趋势来评估。在本文中,我们使用地面监测测量数据和卫星气溶胶光学深度(AOD)数据,调查了美国新英格兰地区 2000-2008 年间细颗粒物(PM2.5;空气动力学直径≤2.5μm的颗粒物)的趋势及其空间分布。我们研究了农村和城市地区的趋势,以便更好地了解区域和本地源排放的趋势。与农村地区相比,城市地区 PM2.5 浓度(μg/m³)的下降更为明显。此外,冬季和夏季分别观察到 PM2.5 浓度下降幅度(μg/m³)最大和最小。这些发现表明,相对于二次颗粒物,一次颗粒物浓度下降幅度更大。这也得到了特征物质数据分析的支持,该分析表明包括黑碳在内的一次污染物的下降趋势强于包括硫酸盐在内的二次污染物。此外,本研究发现,环境中一次污染物的浓度与其各自的源排放减少的速率相同。二次污染物的情况并非如此,其浓度下降的速率比其前体排放的速率慢。这表明,二次污染物的浓度不仅取决于一次排放,还取决于大气氧化剂的可用性,而在研究期间氧化剂的可用性可能不会改变。这种调查空间变化浓度趋势的新方法,结合地面 PM2.5 物质趋势,可以在监管方面具有重要意义。