Road traffic is one of the major sources of atmospheric particles in urban areas. Modelling the contribution of this source to urban pollution requires reliable estimates of emission factors possibly resolved in size. In this work, size-resolved particle emission factors (EFs) of the mixed vehicle fleet were measured in the urban area of Lecce (south-eastern Italy). The approach used is based on vertical fluxes measured with eddy-covariance, counting of vehicles, and estimation of footprints. Results show that the average EF in number (range 0.009-3 ?m) was 2.2*10 #/Veh km, being dominated by ultrafine particles (D < 0.25 ?m) due to exhaust emissions. EF number size distribution decreases with particle size. A reduction of more than four orders of magnitude was observed at D ? 0.9 ?m. EF mass size distribution reaches a maximum around D ? 0.3 ?m then decreases until D ? 0.9 ?m. For larger particles EF in mass increases for the influence of non-exhaust emissions. Average emission factor of PM was 56 mg/Veh Km and that of PM was 63 mg/Veh Km. A comparison of measurements taken in 2010 and 2015 in the same area shows a decreasing trend of the average total EF in number of about 56%, likely as a consequence of the increased use of new generation vehicles following more restrictive limits for particle emissions.

Size-resolved particle emission factors of vehicular traffic derived from urban eddy covariance measurements

Conte M;Contini D
2019

Abstract

Road traffic is one of the major sources of atmospheric particles in urban areas. Modelling the contribution of this source to urban pollution requires reliable estimates of emission factors possibly resolved in size. In this work, size-resolved particle emission factors (EFs) of the mixed vehicle fleet were measured in the urban area of Lecce (south-eastern Italy). The approach used is based on vertical fluxes measured with eddy-covariance, counting of vehicles, and estimation of footprints. Results show that the average EF in number (range 0.009-3 ?m) was 2.2*10 #/Veh km, being dominated by ultrafine particles (D < 0.25 ?m) due to exhaust emissions. EF number size distribution decreases with particle size. A reduction of more than four orders of magnitude was observed at D ? 0.9 ?m. EF mass size distribution reaches a maximum around D ? 0.3 ?m then decreases until D ? 0.9 ?m. For larger particles EF in mass increases for the influence of non-exhaust emissions. Average emission factor of PM was 56 mg/Veh Km and that of PM was 63 mg/Veh Km. A comparison of measurements taken in 2010 and 2015 in the same area shows a decreasing trend of the average total EF in number of about 56%, likely as a consequence of the increased use of new generation vehicles following more restrictive limits for particle emissions.
2019
Istituto di Scienze dell'Atmosfera e del Clima - ISAC - Sede Secondaria Lecce
Urban aerosols
Size-resolved particle fluxes
Eddy-covariance measurements
Vehicle emission factors
Footprint analysis
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/393400
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