Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada-Reno, 1664 N. Virginia St, Reno NV, USA.
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Nevada-Reno, 1664 N. Virginia St, Reno NV, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 Oct 15;530-531:483-492. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.03.146. Epub 2015 May 7.
Ozone (O3) is a secondary air pollutant of long standing and increasing concern for environmental and human health, and as such, the US Environmental Protection Agency will revise the National Ambient Air Quality Standard of 75 ppbv to ≤ 70 ppbv. Long term measurements at the Great Basin National Park (GBNP) indicate that O3 in remote areas of Nevada will exceed a revised standard. As part of the Nevada Rural Ozone Initiative, measurements of O3 and other air pollutants were made at 3 remote sites between February 2012 and March 2014, GBNP, Paradise Valley (PAVA), and Echo Peak (ECHO). Exceptionally high concentrations of each air pollutant were defined relative to each site as mixing ratios that exceeded the 90th percentile of all hourly data. Case studies were analyzed for all periods during which mean daily O3 exceeded the 90th percentile concurrently with a maximum 8-h average (MDA8) O3 that was "exceptionally high" for the site (65 ppbv at PAVA, 70 ppbv at ECHO and GBNP), and of potential regulatory significance. An MDA8 ≥ 65 ppbv occurred only five times at PAVA, whereas this occurred on 49 and 65 days at GBNP and ECHO, respectively. The overall correlation between O3 and other pollutants was poor, consistent with the large distance from significant primary emission sources. Mean CO at these locations exceeded concentrations reported for background sites in 2000. Trajectory residence time calculations and air pollutant concentrations indicate that exceedances at GBNP and ECHO were promoted by air masses originating from multiple sources, including wildfires, transport of pollution from southern California and the marine boundary layer, and transport of Asian pollution plumes. Results indicate that the State of Nevada will exceed a revised O3 standard due to sources that are beyond their control.
臭氧(O3)是一种长期存在的、对环境和人类健康日益关注的二次空气污染物,因此,美国环境保护署将把 75 微克/立方米的国家环境空气质量标准修订为≤70 微克/立方米。大盆地国家公园(GBNP)的长期测量表明,内华达州偏远地区的臭氧将超过修订后的标准。作为内华达州农村臭氧倡议的一部分,2012 年 2 月至 2014 年 3 月,在 3 个偏远地点对臭氧和其他空气污染物进行了测量,这 3 个地点是 GBNP、天堂谷(PAVA)和回声峰(ECHO)。每个空气污染物的异常高浓度是相对于每个站点定义的,混合比超过了所有小时数据的第 90 百分位。对所有平均每日臭氧浓度超过第 90 百分位的时期以及站点的最大 8 小时平均(MDA8)臭氧“异常高”(PAVA 为 65 微克/立方米,ECHO 和 GBNP 为 70 微克/立方米)进行了案例研究,这些臭氧浓度具有潜在的监管意义。PAVA 仅发生了 5 次 MDA8≥65 微克/立方米的情况,而 GBNP 和 ECHO 分别发生了 49 次和 65 次。臭氧与其他污染物之间的总体相关性较差,与远离主要排放源的距离较大相一致。这些地点的平均 CO 浓度超过了 2000 年背景站点报告的浓度。轨迹停留时间计算和空气污染物浓度表明,GBNP 和 ECHO 的超标是由多个来源的空气团引起的,包括野火、来自南加州和海洋边界层的污染传输以及亚洲污染羽流的传输。结果表明,由于内华达州的污染源超出了他们的控制范围,该州将超过修订后的臭氧标准。