| Literature DB >> 35457782 |
Jianwu Shi1,2, Yuzhai Bao1,2, Liang Ren1, Yuanqi Chen3, Zhipeng Bai4, Xinyu Han3.
Abstract
From April 2008 to July 2009, ambient measurements of 58 volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including alkanes, alkenes, and aromatics, were conducted in nine industrial cities (Shenyang, Fushun, Changchun, Jilin, Harbin, Daqing, Huludao, Anshan and Tianjin) of the Northeast Region, China (NRC). Daqing had the highest concentration of VOCs (519.68 ± 309.88 μg/m3), followed by Changchun (345.01 ± 170.52 μg/m3), Harbin (231.14 ± 46.69 μg/m3), Jilin (221.63 ± 34.32 μg/m3), Huludao (195.92 ± 103.26 μg/m3), Fushun (135.43 ± 46.01 μg/m3), Anshan (109.68 ± 23.27 μg/m3), Tianjin (104.31 ± 46.04 μg/m3), Shenyang (75.2 ± 40.09 μg/m3). Alkanes constituted the largest percentage (>40%) in concentrations of the quantified VOCs in NRC, and the exception was Tianjin dominated by aromatics (about 52.34%). Although alkanes were the most abundant VOCs at the cities, the most important VOCs contributing to ozone formation potential (OFP) were alkenes and aromatics. Changchun had the highest OFP (537.3 μg/m3), Tianjin had the lowest OFP (111.7 μg/m3). The main active species contributing to OFP in the nine cities were C2~C6 alkanes, C7~C8 aromatic hydrocarbons, individual cities (Daqing) contained n-hexane, propane and other alkane species. Correlation between individual hydrocarbons, B/T ratio and principal component analysis model (PCA) were deployed to explore the source contributions. The results showed that the source of vehicle exhausts was one of the primary sources of VOCs in all nine cities. Additionally, individual cities, such as Daqing, petrochemical industry was founded to be an important source of VOCs. The results gained from this study provided a large of useful information for better understanding the characteristics and sources of ambient VOCs incities of NRC. The non-carcinogenic risk values of the nine cities were within the safe range recognized by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (HQ < 1), and the lifetime carcinogenic risk values of benzene were 3.82 × 10-5~1.28 × 10-4, which were higher than the safety range specified by the US Environmental Protection Agency (R < 1.00 × 10-6). The results of risk values indicated that there was a risk of cancer in these cities.Entities:
Keywords: VOCs; health risk; ozone formation potential; principal component analysis; source apportionment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457782 PMCID: PMC9028055 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19084915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Nine sampling cities for whole air VOCs samples collected in Northeast Region of China in July 2009.
Description of the nine cities examined in this study.
| City | Location | Urban Area | Population | Main Industry | Sampling Size | DescriptionYear | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shenyang | 41°11′–43°02′ N, 122°25′–123°48′ E | 3945 km2 | 7.1 million | Equipment manufacturing, metal smelting, medical | 145 | 2008 | [ |
| Fushun | 41°41′–42°38′ N, 123°39′–125°28′ E | 675 km2 | 2.2 million | Coal mining, petrochemical, fine chemicals, aluminum | 45 | 2008 | [ |
| Anshan | 40°27′–41°34′ N, 122°10′–123°13′ E | 624.3 km2 | 3.5 million | Iron and steel, minerals processing | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Huludao | 39°59′–41°12′ N, 119°12′–121°02′ E | 2303 km2 | 2.8 million | Petrochemical, equipment manufacturing, zinc | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Changchun | 43°05′–45°15′ N, 124°18′–127°02′ E | 4906 km2 | 3.6 million | Automobile, medical, food, photoelectronic | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Jilin | 42°31′–44°40′ N, 125°40′–127°56′ E | 3636 km2 | 4.3 million | Petrochemical, metallurgy, automobile, carbon production | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Harbin | 44°04′–46°40′ N, 125°42′–130°10′ E | 7086 km2 | 9.5 million | Equipment manufacturing, medical, food, petrochemical | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Daqing | 45°46′–46°55′ N, 124°19′–125°12′ E | 5107 km2 | 2.8 million | Oil extraction, petrochemical | 7 | 2008 | [ |
| Tianjin | 38°33′–40°15′ N, 116°42′–118°04′ E | 11,946 km2 | 11.7 million | Equipment manufacturing, petrochemical | 108 | 2008 | [ |
Figure 2Concentrations of VOCs groups (alkane, alkene and aromatics) measured in nine cities of NRC in July 2009. SY: Shenyang, FS: Fushun, CC: Changchun, JL: Jilin, HEB: Harbin, DQ: Daqing, HLD: Huludao, AS: Anshan, TJ: Tianjin.
Comparison of TVOCs concentrations (μg/m3) between cities of NRC and other cities.
| City | Concentration | Time | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ave | S.d | |||
| SY | 75.20 | 40.09 | April 2008 to July 2009 | this study |
| Fushun | 135.43 | 46.01 | July 2009 | |
| Changchun | 345.01 | 170.52 | July 2009 | |
| Jilin | 221.63 | 34.32 | July 2009 | |
| Harbin | 231.14 | 46.69 | July 2009 | |
| Daqing | 519.68 | 309.88 | July 2009 | |
| Huludao | 195.92 | 103.26 | July 2009 | |
| Anshan | 109.68 | 23.27 | July 2009 | |
| Tianjin | 104.31 | 46.04 | April 2008 to July 2009 | |
| Guangzhou | 176.12 | - | October to November 2004 | [ |
| Xinken | 132.20 | - | October to November 2004 | [ |
| Shanghai | 150.07 | - | July 2006 to February 2010 | [ |
| Taiwan | 547.4 | - | December 1998 to May 1999 | [ |
| Nagoya (Japan) | 79.07 | - | December 2003 to November 2004 | [ |
| Shenyang | 65.33 | - | All of 2019 | [ |
| Tianjin | 48.90 | - | All of 2019 | [ |
“-” means there is no data in this reference.
Figure 3Concentrations of each chemical group (alkane, alkene, aromatics and TVOCs measured at Shenyang and Tianjin from 2008 to 2009. SY: Shenyang, TJ: Tianjin.
Figure 4Time variation of measured NO2, O3, CO, SO2 and TVOCs at Shenyang (a) and Fushun (b) during the campaign.
Top ten species of contributions to ozone formation (μg/m3) by different VOC species in nine cities of NRC.
| Harbin | OFP | Daqing | OFP | Huludao | OFP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toluene | 53.09 | Toluene | 51.49 | Propene | 44.94 |
| Propene | 30.12 | n-Hexane | 36.56 | 1-Butylene | 37.97 |
| Ethene | 29.95 | 1-Hexene | 32.28 | Trans-2-butene | 20.94 |
| 1-Butylene | 25.73 | Propane | 28.46 | Ethene | 15.72 |
| Isoprene | 25.11 | n-Pentane | 22.94 | Propane | 15.22 |
| Trans-2-butene | 17.17 | 1-Butylene | 19.92 | 1-Pentene | 14.37 |
| n-Butane | 16.95 | Isopentane | 18.62 | Cis-2-butene | 12.93 |
| n-Hexane | 12.84 | Ethene | 16.47 | Toluene | 12.10 |
| Cis-2-butene | 12.43 | Isobutane | 15.32 | 1-Hexene | 9.68 |
| p,m-Xylene | 11.87 | Isoprene | 14.31 | Trans-2-pentene | 9.13 |
| Accounting for TVOCs | 0.653 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.601 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.735 |
| TVOCs | 360.00 | TVOCs | 426.90 | TVOCs | 262.60 |
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| Toluene | 98.27 | 1,3-Butadiene | 20.01 | Toluene | 51.42 |
| 1-Hexene | 68.98 | Toluene | 14.17 | 1-Butylene | 34.20 |
| 1-Butylene | 50.73 | 1-Hexene | 8.61 | Propene | 31.86 |
| Trans-2-butene | 43.70 | Ethene | 7.72 | Ethene | 31.55 |
| n-Hexane | 35.28 | p,m-Xylene | 6.08 | n-Butane | 22.57 |
| n-Butane | 33.41 | 1-Butylene | 5.98 | Trans-2-butene | 17.72 |
| Cis-2-butene | 27.87 | Propene | 4.52 | Isoprene | 16.98 |
| Ethene | 20.98 | 1-Pentene | 4.10 | n-Hexane | 13.58 |
| Propene | 17.30 | Trans-2-butene | 3.69 | Cis-2-butene | 12.84 |
| p,m-Xylene | 14.65 | o-Xylene | 3.67 | p,m-Xylene | 9.52 |
| Accounting for TVOCs | 0.765 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.646 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.700 |
| TVOCs | 537.30 | TVOCs | 121.60 | TVOCs | 346.20 |
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| Toluene | 28.90 | Ethene | 24.05 | Toluene | 21.11 |
| Ethene | 22.9 | Propene | 22.08 | Ethene | 8.90 |
| Propene | 14.11 | Isoprene | 19.14 | p,m-Xylene | 7.90 |
| 1,2,3-Trimethylbenzene | 11.52 | 1-Hexene | 18.31 | Propene | 7.35 |
| p,m-Xylene | 8.23 | Toluene | 18.26 | 1-Butylene | 5.03 |
| n-Hexane | 6.88 | Isopentane | 14.96 | o-xylene | 4.93 |
| 1-Butylene | 6.86 | 1-Butylene | 12.63 | 1,2,3-Trimethylbenzene | 3.67 |
| m-Ethyltoluene | 6.49 | Trans-2-butene | 8.37 | Isopentane | 3.61 |
| 4-Ethyltoluene | 5.60 | Cis-2-butene | 6.83 | 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene | 3.52 |
| o-Xylene | 5.44 | n-Hexane | 5.92 | Ethylbenzene | 3.35 |
| Accounting for TVOCs | 0.666 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.678 | Accounting for TVOCs | 0.621 |
| TVOCs | 175.70 | TVOCs | 222.10 | TVOCs | 111.70 |
Figure 5Seasonal variation of contributions to OFP by different VOC groups (alkanes, alkenes and aromatics) at Shenyang and Tianjin. SY: Shenyang, TJ: Tianjin.
Figure 6Source apportionment of VOCs at Shenyang (a) and Tianjin (b).
Comparison of non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risks of benzene series in nine cities of NRC with other cities.
| City | R | HQ | HI | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benzene | Toluene | Ethyl-Benzene | p,m-Xylene | o-Xylene | ||||
| Shenyang | 3.82 × 10−5 | 1.63 × 10−1 | 2.15 × 10−3 | 2.67 × 10−3 | 1.94 × 10−2 | 1.30 × 10−2 | 2.00 × 10−1 | this study |
| Fushun | 6.57 × 10−5 | 2.81 × 10−1 | 5.12 × 10−3 | 3.76 × 10−3 | 2.77 × 10−2 | 2.12 × 10−2 | 3.39 × 10−1 | |
| Changchun | 4.18 × 10−5 | 1.78 × 10−1 | 1.48 × 10−3 | 1.99 × 10−3 | 1.58 × 10−2 | 1.00 × 10−2 | 2.08 × 10−1 | |
| Jilin | 1.28 × 10−4 | 5.46 × 10−1 | 1.68 × 10−3 | 1.43 × 10−3 | 1.17 × 10−2 | 1.14 × 10−2 | 5.72 × 10−1 | |
| Harbin | 6.81 × 10−5 | 2.91 × 10−1 | 1.06 × 10−2 | 9.53 × 10−3 | 4.23 × 10−2 | 2.82 × 10−2 | 3.82 × 10−1 | |
| Daqing | 4.26 × 10−5 | 1.82 × 10−1 | 5.55 × 10−3 | 4.19 × 10−3 | 2.74 × 10−2 | 2.08 × 10−2 | 2.40 × 10−1 | |
| Huludao | 4.98 × 10−5 | 2.13 × 10−1 | 1.31 × 10−3 | 2.38 × 10−3 | 1.26 × 10−2 | 1.09 × 10−2 | 2.40 × 10−1 | |
| Anshan | 5.01 × 10−5 | 2.14 × 10−1 | 3.12 × 10−3 | 2.73 × 10−3 | 2.37 × 10−2 | 1.56 × 10−2 | 2.59 × 10−1 | |
| Tianjin | 4.25 × 10−5 | 1.82 × 10−1 | 3.16 × 10−3 | 3.71 × 10−3 | 3.09 × 10−2 | 1.91 × 10−2 | 2.39 × 10−1 | |
| Guangzhou | 5.34 × 10−5 | 2.28 × 10−1 | 3.95 × 10−1 | 4.26 × 10−3 | 3.06 × 10−2 | 2.42 × 10−2 | 2.91 × 10−1 | [ |
| Beijing | 4.19 × 10−5 | 1.57 × 10−1 | 2.39 × 10−1 | 3.29 × 10−3 | 8.06 × 10−3 | 3.53 × 10−3 | 1.96 × 10−1 | [ |
R: the lifetime carcinogenic risk value, HQ: non-carcinogenic risk Hazard quotient, HI: hazard index.