| Literature DB >> 26891184 |
Zhen Cheng1, Lina Luo1, Shuxiao Wang2, Yungang Wang3, Sumit Sharma4, Hikari Shimadera5, Xiaoliang Wang6, Michael Bressi7, Regina Maura de Miranda8, Jingkun Jiang9, Wei Zhou9, Oscar Fajardo9, Naiqiang Yan1, Jiming Hao9.
Abstract
Ambient PM2.5 pollution is a substantial threat to public health in global megacities. This paper reviews the PM2.5 pollution of 45 global megacities in 2013, based on mass concentration from official monitoring networks and composition data reported in the literature. The results showed that the five most polluted megacities were Delhi, Cairo, Xi'an, Tianjin and Chengdu, all of which had an annual average concentration of PM2.5 greater than 89μg/m(3). The five cleanest megacities were Miami, Toronto, New York, Madrid and Philadelphia, the annual averages of which were less than 10μg/m(3). Spatial distribution indicated that the highly polluted megacities are concentrated in east-central China and the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Organic matter and SNA (sum of sulfate, nitrate and ammonium) contributed 30% and 36%, respectively, of the average PM2.5 mass for all megacities. Notable seasonal variation of PM2.5 polluted days was observed, especially for the polluted megacities of China and India, resulting in frequent heavy pollution episodes occurring during more polluted seasons such as winter. Marked differences in PM2.5 pollution between developing and developed megacities require more effort on local emissions reduction as well as global cooperation to address the PM2.5 pollution of those megacities mainly in Asia.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollution; Chemical composition; Megacity; PM(2.5) (fine particulate matter)
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26891184 DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2016.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Int ISSN: 0160-4120 Impact factor: 9.621