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Global Chemical Composition of Ambient Fine Particulate Matter for Exposure Assessment.

Authors :
Philip, Sajeev
Martin, Randall V.
van Donkelaar, Aaron
Jason Wai-Ho Lo
Yuxuan Wang
Dan Chen
Lin Zhang
Kasibhatla, Prasad S.
Siwen Wang
Qiang Zhang
Zifeng Lu
Streets, David G.
Bittman, Shabtai
Macdonald, Douglas J.
Source :
Environmental Science & Technology. 11/18/2014, Vol. 48 Issue 22, p13060-13068. 9p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Epidemiologic and health impact studies are inhibited by the paucity of global, long-term measurements of the chemical composition of fine particulate matter. We inferred PM2.5 chemical composition at 0.1° × 0.1° spatial resolution for 2004-2008 by combining aerosol optical depth retrieved from the MODIS and MISR satellite instruments, with coincident profile and composition information from the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model. Evaluation of the satellite-model PM 2.5 composition data set with North American in situ measurements indicated significant spatial agreement for secondary inorganic aerosol, particulate organic mass, black carbon, mineral dust, and sea salt. We found that global population-weighted PM2.5 concentrations were dominated by particulate organic mass (11.9 ± 7.3 μg/m3), secondary inorganic aerosol (11.1 ± 5.0 μg/m3), and mineral dust (11.1 ± 7.9 μg/m3). Secondary inorganic PM 2.5concentrations exceeded 30 μg/m3 over East China. Sensitivity simulations suggested that population weighted ambient PM2.5 from bio-fuel burning (11 μg/m3) could be almost as large as from fossil fuel combustion sources (17 μg/m3). These estimates offer information about global population exposure to the chemical components and sources of PM2.5. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0013936X
Volume :
48
Issue :
22
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
100679289
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/es502965b