| Literature DB >> 30781818 |
Halley L Brantley1, Gayle S W Hagler2, Scott C Herndon3, Paola Massoli4, Michael H Bergin5, Armistead G Russell6.
Abstract
Railyards are important transportation hubs, and they are often situated near populated areas with high co-located density of manufacturing, freight movement and commercial enterprises. Emissions occurring within railyards can affect nearby air quality. To better understand the air pollution levels in proximity to a major railyard, an intensive mobile air monitoring study was conducted in May 2012 around a major railyard area in Atlanta, GA, constituted of two separate facilities situated side-by-side. A total of 19 multi-hour mobile monitoring sessions took place over different times of day, days of the week, and under a variety of wind conditions. High time resolution measurements included black carbon (BC), particle number concentration (PN), particle optical extinction (EXT), oxides of nitrogen (NO, NO₂, NOy), carbon monoxide (CO), and speciated air toxics. Urban background was estimated to contribute substantially (>70%) to EXT and CO, whereas BC, oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and toluene had comparably low background contributions (<30%). Mobile monitoring data were aggregated into 50 meter spatial medians by wind categories, with categories including low speed wind conditions (<0.5 m s-1) and, for wind speeds above that threshold, by wind direction relative to the railyard. Spatial medians of different pollutants measured had a wide range of correlation-gas-phase air toxics (benzene, toluene, acetaldehyde) had moderate correlation with each other (r = 0.46⁻0.59) and between toluene and CO (r = 0.53), but lower correlation for other pairings. PN had highest correlation with oxides of nitrogen (r = 0.55⁻0.66), followed by BC (r = 0.4), and lower correlation with other pollutants. Multivariate regression analysis on the full set of 50 m medians found BC and NO as having the strongest relationship to railyard emissions, in comparison to their respective background levels. This was indicated by an increase associated with transiting through the yard and inverse relationship with distance from the railyard; NO and BC decreased by a factor of approximately 0.5 and 0.7 over 1 km distance of the railyard boundary, respectively. Low speed, variable wind conditions were related to higher concentrations of all measured parameters.Entities:
Keywords: air pollution; locomotive; mobile monitoring; near-source; railyard
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30781818 PMCID: PMC6407103 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16040535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Map of conjoined Inman/Tilford rail yard areas with locations surveyed in detail by the mobile monitoring laboratory shown in blue (western side), green (crossing through the rail yard), and eastern side (orange).
Figure 2Measurement count by (a) time-of-day and wind category (b) day-of-week and wind category and (c) wind speed and wind category.
Mobile monitoring instrumentation and sampling rates.
| Measurement | Rate | Instrument |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon Dioxide (CO2) | 0.9 s | Licor 6262 (2) and Licor 820 |
| Carbon Monoxide (CO) | 1 s | Aerodyne mini QC-TILDAS 1 (2230 cm−1) |
| Nitric Oxide (NO) | 1 s | Thermo 42i Chemiluminescence |
| Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) | 1 s | Aerodyne Cavity Enhanced Phase Shift |
| Oxides of Nitrogen (NOy) | 1.4 s | Thermo 42i with external inlet-tip Mo Converter |
| Black Carbon (< 2.5 µm) | 3 s | Thermo 5012 Multi-Angle Absorption Photometer |
| Particle Extinction | 3 s | Aerodyne Cavity Enhanced Phase Shift |
| Particle Number Concentration | 1.8 s | TSI 3025A Condensation Particle Counter |
| Aromatics and Oxygenates, including benzene, toluene, acetone, acetaldehyde | 1.4 s | Ionicon Quadrupole PTR-MS 1 |
1 QC-TILDAS: Quantum Cascade Tunable Infrared Laser Differential Absorption Spectrometer; PTR-MS: Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometer.
Figure 3Example sampling session (concentration values in black) and estimated background concentrations (shown in black).
Summary of measured pollutant concentrations by session. Column “N” represents number of sessions while N (obs) is number of observations. The grand means of the observed concentrations, estimated background concentrations, and proportion of the mean concentration attributed to background are given in the last three columns. Numbers in parentheses represent the standard deviations of the session means.
| Pollutant | N | N (obs) | Session Mean | Background Mean | Background Fraction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BC (μg m−3) | 18 | 157107 | 1.4 (0.64) | 0.33 (0.16) | 0.27 (0.14) |
| CO (ppb) | 19 | 183693 | 270 (72) | 190 (24) | 0.74 (0.12) |
| PN (cm−3) | 18 | 173049 | 6300 (2300) | 3900 (1600) | 0.61 (0.11) |
| Ext. (Mm−1) | 15 | 150828 | 35 (13) | 27 (11) | 0.76 (0.077) |
| NO (ppb) | 19 | 183041 | 11 (7) | 1 (0.59) | 0.1 (0.043) |
| NO2 (ppb) | 19 | 181870 | 16 (7.3) | 5.2 (5) | 0.28 (0.14) |
| NOy (ppb) | 18 | 181120 | 23 (12) | 5.5 (2.5) | 0.25 (0.068) |
| Acetaldehyde (ppb) | 17 | 189208 | 2.2 (0.36) | 1.5 (0.3) | 0.68 (0.075) |
| Benzene (ppb) | 17 | 189208 | 0.51 (0.073) | 0.26 (0.057) | 0.51 (0.095) |
| Toluene (ppb) | 17 | 189208 | 0.48 (0.18) | 0.13 (0.032) | 0.28 (0.081) |
Figure 4Concentrations of NO2 aggregated by 50 m road segment during (left) winds from the north-northeast (middle) winds from the south-southwest and (right) calm winds. Segments are binned so that each color represents an equal number of road segments. Blue arrows represent range of mean hourly wind directions.
Figure 5Concentration geometric means (black points) and box-and-whisker plots for concentrations aggregated by 50 m road segment and hour on road segments representing upwind, within, and downwind of the rail yard during cross-wind conditions. Boxes represent 25th and 75th quantiles, outlier points are measurements greater than 1.5 times the interquartile range away from the edge of the box. All measurements are plotted on a log-scale.
Figure 6Pearson correlation between pollutant concentrations aggregated by 50 m road segment and hour.
Regression Results. Estimated effect of each of the predictors on the mean log transformed pollutant concentration, using both the independent and spatially correlated error models. Standard errors of the estimates are shown in parenthesis. Estimates that are significantly different from 0 (p-value less than 0.05) are marked with *.
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| Independent | Spatial | Independent | Spatial | Independent | Spatial | Independent | Spatial | Independent | Spatial | |
| NO | 0.76 (0.02) * | 0.66 (0.09) * | 0.41 (0.03) * | 0.53 (0.19) * | 0.66 (0.05) * | 0.59 (0.08) * | 0.11 (0.04) * | 0.37 (0.09) * | −0.90 (0.06) * | −0.79 (0.08) * |
| NO2 | 2.06 (0.03) * | 1.85 (0.1) * | 0.46 (0.04) * | 0.71 (0.22) * | 0.62 (0.05) * | 0.67 (0.08) * | 0.21 (0.04) * | 0.51 (0.09) * | −0.75 (0.07) * | −0.47 (0.09) * |
| NOy | 2.27 (0.02) * | 2.16 (0.07) * | 0.39 (0.03) * | 0.54 (0.15) * | 0.59 (0.04) * | 0.58 (0.06) * | 0.17 (0.03) * | 0.34 (0.07) * | −0.73 (0.05) * | −0.54 (0.07) * |
| BC | −0.43 (0.02) * | −0.50 (0.06) * | 0.35 (0.03) * | 0.38 (0.13) * | 0.58 (0.04) * | 0.59 (0.05) * | 0.20 (0.03) * | 0.38 (0.05) * | −0.4 (0.05) * | −0.32 (0.06) * |
| CO | 5.31 (0.01) * | 5.30 (0.02) * | 0.12 (0.01) * | 0.19 (0.05) * | 0.02 (0.01) | 0.04 (0.02) * | 0.03 (0.01) * | 0.02 (0.02) | 0.05 (0.01) * | 0.09 (0.02) * |
| Ext. | 3.30 (0.01) * | 3.25 (0.06) * | 0.34 (0.02) * | 0.40 (0.13) * | 0.21 (0.03) * | 0.24 (0.04) * | 0.09 (0.02) * | 0.16 (0.04) * | −0.18 (0.04) * | −0.22 (0.04) * |
| PN | 8.42 (0.01) * | 8.38 (0.04) * | 0.15 (0.02) * | 0.19 (0.08) * | 0.27 (0.02) * | 0.24 (0.03) * | 0.002 (0.02) | 0.13 (0.04) * | −0.30 (0.03) * | −0.30 (0.04) * |
| Benz. | −0.85 (0.01) * | −0.84 (0.02) * | 0.13 (0.01) * | 0.14 (0.03) * | 0.03 (0.02) * | 0.01 (0.03) | 0.01 (0.01) | −0.01 (0.03) | −0.06 (0.02) * | −0.07 (0.04) |
| Tol. | −1.31 (0.01) * | −1.23 (0.05) * | 0.30 (0.02) * | 0.32 (0.07) * | 0.24 (0.03) * | 0.12 (0.06) * | −0.01 (0.02) | −0.10 (0.07) | 0.12 (0.04) * | 0.04 (0.09) |
| Acetal. | 0.70 (<0.01) * | 0.73 (0.02) * | 0.13 (0.01) * | 0.13 (0.03) * | 0.10 (0.01) * | 0.03 (0.02) | 0.08 (0.01) * | 0.05 (0.02) * | −0.06 (0.01) * | −0.14 (0.03) * |