1 research outputs found
Neighborhood-Scale Spatial Models of Diesel Exhaust Concentration Profile Using 1‑Nitropyrene and Other Nitroarenes
With
emerging evidence that diesel exhaust exposure poses distinct
risks to human health, the need for fine-scale models of diesel exhaust
pollutants is growing. We modeled the spatial distribution of several
nitrated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (NPAHs) to identify fine-scale
gradients in diesel exhaust pollution in two Seattle, WA neighborhoods.
Our modeling approach fused land-use regression, meteorological dispersion
modeling, and pollutant monitoring from both fixed and mobile platforms.
We applied these modeling techniques to concentrations of 1-nitropyrene
(1-NP), a highly specific diesel exhaust marker, at the neighborhood
scale. We developed models of two additional nitroarenes present in
secondary organic aerosol: 2-nitropyrene and 2-nitrofluoranthene.
Summer predictors of 1-NP, including distance to railroad, truck emissions,
and mobile black carbon measurements, showed a greater specificity
to diesel sources than predictors of other NPAHs. Winter sampling
results did not yield stable models, likely due to regional mixing
of pollutants in turbulent weather conditions. The model of summer
1-NP had an R<sup>2</sup> of 0.87 and cross-validated R<sup>2</sup> of 0.73. The synthesis of high-density sampling and hybrid modeling
was successful in predicting diesel exhaust pollution at a very fine
scale and identifying clear gradients in NPAH concentrations within
urban neighborhoods